Tuesday, September 30, 2014
Monday, September 29, 2014
Sunday, September 28, 2014
The Road Narrows As You Go (2014)
Saturday, September 27, 2014
Cold Pop (2010)
As mentioned in yesterday's post, Mark DeLong was an early contributor to Hardscrabble Gallery's "first chapter" of exhibitions and events. Although I did not see DeLong's show, I did pick up a copy of his Cold Pop (2010) at Geoffrey Farmer's Every Letter In the Alphabet and have cherished it ever since.
Cold Pop is comprised of three sections: the first and largest includes DeLong's six-panel cartoons, followed by a short (colour) section of his ceramic works, and finally a series of his full-page drawings.
While I appreciate the variety, it is the cartoons and their psycho-sexual blend of repulsion and desire that has me returning again and again to this frighteningly insightful book.
Friday, September 26, 2014
Hardscrabble Gallery
How pleased I was to see in my inbox this morning Erik Hood's announcement that Hardscrabble Gallery at 1029 East 15th Avenue is back for a "second chapter."
Opening this Sunday September 28 1-4PM is Cameron Kerr: A Photograph Is No Substitute For Anything.
This exhibition of new work by Cameron Kerr considers two things; sculpture and photography. Known locally for his sculptures of marble and wood, Kerr initiates this dialogue with a conversation between the material and the pictorial world using photographs. Kerr proceeds on developing this lexicon where a pastiche of references and various mediums are composed into a documented mise-en-scene.
These photographs can be split into two distinct and contrasting modes. First, where the subject of the studio is the primary activity and secondly, single pieces of sculpture isolated against painted backdrops. Kerr then completes the exhibition with a single sculpture of yellow cedar.
Cameron Kerr is a North Vancouver based artist. He has most recently had public works installed in Vancouver and North Vancouver and was included at the Kamloops Art Gallery’s exhibition "An Era of Discontent: Art as Occupation" (2012).
Past Hardscrabble exhibitions and events have included work by Kim Kennedy Austin, Fabiola Carranza, Mark DeLong, Michael Drebert, Jacob Gleeson, Nathan Haynes (see image above) and Scott Moore.
Thursday, September 25, 2014
Wednesday, September 24, 2014
Tuesday, September 23, 2014
Emily Dickinson's "Besides the Autumn poets sing" (131)
Besides the Autumn poets sing,
A few prosaic days
A little this side of the snow
And that side of the Haze -
A few incisive mornings -
A few Ascetic eves -
Gone - Mr Bryant’s “Golden Rod” -
And Mr Thomson’s “sheaves.”
Still, is the bustle in the brook -
Sealed are the spicy valves -
Mesmeric fingers softly touch
The eyes of many Elves -
Perhaps a squirrel may remain -
My sentiments to share -
Grant me, Oh Lord, a sunny mind -
Thy windy will to bear!
Monday, September 22, 2014
A small room inside a bay window. A single bed, a table and chair, and a sink. I could manage something larger, with more conveniences, but I could never match the view.
Morning and its wet pewter light. Raindrops tapping at the leaves, scratching at the eaves, eventually the downspout.
A day that begins in summer and, as of 7:29 PDT, ends in autumn.
Sunday, September 21, 2014
Saturday, September 20, 2014
Friday, September 19, 2014
The Independent
Above is today's view (looking southeast) of what was once the site of The Cellar Jazz Club.
Stepping back a block (to the west), you see this:
The Independent is the name of a controversial condominium and townhouse development by Rize Alliance Properties.
To help sell this development, Rize Alliance hired agents like Rennie Marketing Systems, who have reached into the Ayn Rand playbook to give us "fountainheads" like these:
Thursday, September 18, 2014
The Cellar Jazz Club
Back in April 1956, members of the local jazz scene (a scene that included musician Al Neil) opened The Cellar Jazz Club at the northwest corner of Watson Street and West Broadway.
Although big bands were common to downtown hotels and night clubs, the Cellar featured smaller ensembles focused less on swing and dance music than on poetry and bop.
The pictures above show the exterior of the cellar in January 2014 (left), just before the building was torn down, and in March 1961 (right), on the occasion of a "live" CBC recording.
For more information, click here.
Wednesday, September 17, 2014
Tuesday, September 16, 2014
Monday, September 15, 2014
Paris in Film
Some silent film footage of Paris in the 1960s shot by Andre de la Varre. Monsieur de la Varre asks that if you would like to licence this footage, contact him here.
Sunday, September 14, 2014
A small room inside a bay window. A single bed, a table and chair, and a sink. I could manage something larger, with more conveniences, but I could never match the view.
September often brings with it hot days, but almost always cool mornings and even cooler nights. Not last night. When I turned in at midnight it was 16 degrees centigrade.
James Salter, whom I had the pleasure of reading with in Paris in the early '00s, begins his deliciously-written yet at times disturbingly male-gazing A Sport and a Pastime (1967) with this paragraph:
September. It seems those luminous days will never end. The city [Paris], which is almost empty in August, now is filling up again. The restaurants are all reopening, the shops. People are coming back from the country, the sea, from trips on roads all jammed with cars. The station is very crowded. There are children, dogs, families with old pieces of luggage bound by straps. I make my way among them. It's like being in a tunnel. Finally I emerge onto the brilliance of the quai, beneath a roof of glass panels which seem to magnify the light.
Saturday, September 13, 2014
Friday, September 12, 2014
This Is Not a Transformer
A few streets north of my home is a transformer that BC Hydro, like Canada Post with its once red mail boxes, has painted as someone might cultivate a garden.
Thursday, September 11, 2014
Deterrent Sculpture
People who live on the corner of city blocks often complain about pedestrians taking short-cuts across their lawns. For some, it is the mere presence of strangers on their property; for others, it is the path in the grass they leave behind.
To get around this, some property owners place plantings at these corners, or a fence. Sometimes these fences extend diagonally from the corner of the house to the property line, like the chain-link fence at the southwest corner of 10th Avenue and Victoria Drive.
Last Saturday, while visiting a friend on William Street (just east of Nanaimo), I came upon a brick structure whose siting suggests its intention: to discourage short-cuts. But what a structure! A form that is open, almost welcoming, but closed to those outside it.
Wednesday, September 10, 2014
Public Art
A few months ago, while looking for a place to park on Granville Island, a voice came over the radio to say that a mural was planned for the silos at Ocean Concrete, "and won't that look nice!"
Why would anyone want to mess with that?
“I think both for the boys and for us the size of those silos is bigger than they really imagined. Yes, they did all their calculations, but this is 23,500 square feet,” says Barrie Mowatt, Biennale founder and president. “Lots of surprises,” he adds.
(How would you like to be an artist and have the person who invited you to his biennale publicly accuse you of lacking in imagination?)
Another "surprise" is the theft of $20,000 dollars worth of spray paint (Was a police report filed? Did the reporter check with the VPD?), plus another $20,000 needed to protect the mural from wear and tear.
“So your $50,000 budget just went to hell,” Mr. Mowatt says. He adds that the budgets for the other major projects for this Biennale have been maintained. “So this becomes an anomaly.”
(Not the Biennale's mural budget -- "your" budget.)
On the topic of crowdsourcing to cover the deficit:
“We’re naive in terms of crowdsourcing,” says Mr. Mowatt, who says the point of the campaign was not simply financial, but also to involve the public in this public art endeavour. “Our sense was how do you tell the story when you don’t have the images?” Showing the grey concrete silos, they figured, would not be as exciting for potential donors as being able to watch them transform into spectacular animated giants.
(The image below is of the grey concrete grain silos on Burrard Inlet, as photographed by John Vanderpant in the 1930s.)
Later, the author of the article writes:
When I ask what happens if the Biennale does not raise the money for the silo project, which is to be completed Sept. 6, Mr. Mowatt at first refuses to entertain the possibility. “I mean, we’re a rich city. We’re a very wealthy city. There are lots of people in this city who could write cheques – not [just] for this but to fund the whole Biennale.”
(Really? And are these the same people who will be writing cheques for the new Vancouver Art Gallery?)
In closing, here is an April 29, 2011 comment from another player in Mowatt's Biennale fandango, a member of the same municipal party that allowed then-councillor Jim Green to bully into being a project that turns public space into market place:
"We're enormously lucky that Barrie and the Biennale group have decided to do this in Vancouver, because at relatively low cost to the city, we get a regularly changing display of really impressive public art, the kind of thing we wouldn't normally be able to afford on a permanent basis," says Heather Deal, the Vancouver city councillor who is council's liaison on the Public Art Committee.
Tuesday, September 9, 2014
Monday, September 8, 2014
New Directions in Contemporary Art
On the weekend I bumped into Cornelia Wyngaarden; first at Model, then at a COPE nominations meeting. It was at Model that she told me about Jed Perl's assessment of Jeff Koons, which she read in a recent issue of The New York Review of Books. Rather than seek out the piece I thought I would wait to see if it showed up in my weisslink.com bundle. If it didn't, just as well. But since it did, here it is:
THE CULT OF JEFF KOONS
Jed Perl
September 25, 2014
Jeff Koons: Rendering of Pluto and Proserpina, 2010–2013 <http://tinyurl.com/q2oc8q8>
Imagine the Jeff Koons retrospective at the Whitney Museum of American Art as the perfect storm. And at the center of the perfect storm there is a perfect vacuum. The storm is everything going on around Jeff Koons: the multimillion-dollar auction prices, the blue chip dealers, the hyperbolic claims of the critics, the adulation and the controversy and the public that quite naturally wants to know what all the fuss is about. The vacuum is the work itself, displayed on five of the six floors of the Whitney, a succession of pop culture trophies so emotionally dead that museumgoers appear a little dazed as they dutifully take out their iPhones and produce their selfies.
Presented against stark white walls under bright white light, Koons’s floating basketballs, Plexiglas-boxed household appliances, and elaborately produced jumbo-sized versions of sundry knickknacks, souvenirs, toys, and backyard pool paraphernalia have a chilly chic arrogance. The sculptures and paintings of this fifty-nine-year-old artist are so meticulously, mechanically polished and groomed that they rebuff any attempt to look at them, much less feel anything about them. This is the last show that the Whitney will mount in its Marcel Breuer building on Madison Avenue before moving to new quarters in the Meatpacking District, and Adam Weinberg, the museum’s director, has come up with a parting shot so swaggeringly obnoxious that it can’t be ignored.
Anybody who has taken Modern Art 101 will be able to give you some general idea of how we arrived at the point where a ten-foot-high polychromed aluminum reproduction of a multicolored pile of Play-Doh holds center stage at the Whitney—and is hailed by Roberta Smith, one of the chief art critics at The New York Times, as “a new, almost certain masterpiece.” What we are seeing at the Whitney is the mainstreaming of Dadaism and in particular of the readymade, the ordinary and frequently mass-produced objects that Marcel Duchamp reimagined as art objects, including, early on, a bicycle wheel, a bottle rack, and a urinal.
Duchamp produced his first readymades roughly a hundred years ago. At the time they were seen by hardly anybody; they were the ultimate insider’s cool dude joke art. This was a joke that Duchamp presented deadpan, with the deliberateness of a man who very carefully weighed every move he made. He had already pursued a serious career as a painter; he had created a sensation at the Armory Show in 1913 with his Nude Descending a Staircase; and he would not have abandoned painting without cause. Duchamp felt there was too much of a mystique around art. Years later, he told Calvin Tomkins, “I don’t believe in [art] with all the trimmings, the mystic trimming and the reverence trimming and so forth.” The readymade was an act of supreme skepticism; at least that is what it was for Duchamp.
Koons, simply put, is Duchamp with lots of ostentatious trimmings. This is not a pretty sight. Duchamp’s readymades have an almost monastic austerity. Koons has bulked them up, transforming the ultimate insider’s art into the art that will not shut up. For Koons’s supporters, and they are legion, this is an anti-tradition that has become an honorable tradition, with all that implies about the risks and rewards of legitimacy. The art historians, with their addiction to neat chronologies, will tell you that Duchamp begat Rauschenberg and Johns, who begat Warhol, who begat Koons. It has been Koons’s weird instinctive salesman’s genius to capitalize on the art world’s increasingly confused adulation of Duchamp, Rauschenberg, Johns, and Warhol, who are nowadays seen as seductive mixtures of trickster, mystic, magus, prophet, virtuoso (and at least in Warhol’s case, huckster).
There is a now-you-see-it-now-you-don’t element to the reputations of all these artists, who are viewed as simultaneously criticizing and celebrating the commercial culture that is their inveterate subject. If you listen in on conversations in the galleries at the Koons show—whether a museum lecturer speaking to a group or a more knowledgeable visitor giving some friends the lowdown—you invariably find that the Whitney’s overwhelmingly middle-class audience is being told that Koons presents a sly critique of middle-class values. Of course everybody can also see that he is having his way with commercial culture—and with us. Koons knows how to capitalize on the guilty pleasure that the museumgoing public takes in all his mixed messages. He knows how to leave people feeling simultaneously ironical, erudite, silly, sophisticated, and bemused.
Koons presents his work under an assortment of brand names, and many of these brands have their own galleries at the Whitney. Everything Koons produces has a factory-produced impersonality. His studio is a kind of factory, although a far cry from the darkly druggy escapades of Warhol’s Factory. There are some 128 people employed in Koons’s studio, which from photographs looks as antiseptic as an operating room; sixty-four employees work in the painting department, forty-four in the sculpture department. Among the brands he has marketed since the early 1980s are “Equilibrium” (the floating basketballs); “Statuary/Kiepenkerl” (stainless steel replicas of a statuette of Bob Hope, an inflatable rabbit, a bust of Louis XIV); “Banality” (reproductions in porcelain and polychromed wood of various knickknacks); and “Made in Heaven” (photorealist paintings and glass sculptures of Koons in flagrante delicto with his then wife, Ilona Staller, known in Italy as the porn star Cicciolina).
The newer brands include “Celebration” (jumbo-sized renderings in mirror-polished stainless steel of a heart, an egg, and a variety of animals) and “Easyfun” (colored mirrors shaped like animals’ heads). Balloon Dog, from the “Celebration” series, may be the most famous of all Koons’s concoctions. This is a ten-foot-high rendering, in mirror-polished stainless steel with a translucent color coating, of a canine made from the kind of sausage-shaped balloons that amuse little children. Koons’s Balloon Dog was produced in an edition of five. The yellow one is on display at the Whitney. The orange one sold last year at auction for more than $58 million, the record for a living artist.
Koons has his detractors. Some years ago, Rosalind Krauss—who as one of the founders of the magazine October pioneered a strenuous mix of left-oriented political, sociological, and semiotic thought—told The New York Times that Koons had turned Dada on its head because he was “in cahoots with the media.” She said she found his “self-advertisement…repulsive.” These are strong, smart words.
But in the art history departments where Krauss and the somber style of October magazine still reign more or less supreme, Koons is now regarded, like it or not, as a part of the history of our times. So there is a determination to account for his success and (let’s be honest about this) to give some scholarly tone to the megabucks art world fun. Koons’s low-meets-high-meets-low mix-ups have proven to be catnip for quite a few intellectuals. Joachim Pissarro, the art historian who was for a time a curator at the Museum of Modern Art, wrote an essay not long ago claiming that Koons’s work “goes back, somehow, to our innermost desires”—that “our” really gets on my nerves—and managed in his first sentences to cite not only Freud but Plato.
Norman Rosenthal, for years head of exhibitions at the Royal Academy in London, is about to publish a book of interviews with Koons, in which the artist at moments imagines himself a sort of philosophe of the twelve-step program. “Morals are very important,” Koons opines:
"You cannot separate the moral from the visual. I really believe that to have transcendence into the highest realms you have to have acceptance of others. You have to leave the self. You get so bored with the self."
And in Koonsland, if transcendence doesn’t work, there is always shopping. The clothing chain H&M, a sponsor of the Whitney show, has just come out with a handbag bearing Balloon Dog’s image, priced at $49.50; it was unveiled along with the new flagship H&M on Fifth Avenue and 48th Street, the store’s façade emblazoned with giant images of Balloon Dog. Just north at Rockefeller Center, Koons is letting the summer tourists get a gander at the latest of his topiary concoctions, a work called Split/Rocker, with the combined half-heads of a horse and a dinosaur covered with real flowering plants. A nearby bar is offering a Koons cocktail, the “Split/Rock Margarita.”
To evaluate this onslaught can feel hopeless, if not downright absurd, as if one were some Judge Judy of the art world, examining a situation so incredible that the very act of judgment calls one’s credibility (and credulity) into question. Perhaps this helps to explain why so many sophisticated observers, confronting the Koons cult, would rather join than fight. Certainly one of the fascinations of the Whitney show has been the near unanimity of the critics of record, who appear to be of the opinion that it’s high time for everybody, like it or not, to make their peace with Koons.
In The New Yorker, Peter Schjeldahl, certainly a man of discriminating tastes, basically announced that there was no way of arguing with his success. Koons is “the signal artist of today’s world,” Schjeldahl wrote. “If you don’t like that, take it up with the world.” In New York magazine Jerry Saltz announced that “haters will hate, but ‘A Retrospective’ will allow anyone with an open mind to grasp why Koons is such a complicated, bizarre, thrilling, alien, annoying artist.” And Roberta Smith, after expressing reservations about a ten-foot-high stainless steel rendition of Bernini’s Rape of Persephone outfitted with live petunias, felt the need to censor her own feeling that it might be “déclassé,” commenting, “but there I go again.” The critics, of all people, are putting the world on notice that the work is criticism-proof.
“In my observation,” Schjeldahl writes, “Koons’s most ardent detractors skip aesthetic judgment of his art to assert a wish that it not exist.” When Schjeldahl regards Koons’s overblown baubles, what he sees is an authentic aesthetic response to the mind-bending pressures of a global consumer society. Our Gilded Age, so Schjeldahl may imagine, precipitates—empowers, even legitimates—this high-tech kitsch vision. But does it follow that those of us who do not respond to the work are in denial—that we are, whether consciously or unconsciously, delegitimizing a legitimate aesthetic? Is Schjeldahl suggesting that the very existence of the work forces some sort of aesthetic embrace? Must it be appreciated simply because it exists (and sells for so much money)? And where does this leave the average museumgoer, whoever that mythical being might be, who has been told even before walking through the doors of the Whitney that whatever scruples he or she has are suspect?
The Koons phenomenon has a belligerence that may well be unprecedented in the art world. For many that belligerence reached a climax in 1991, when Koons exhibited paintings and sculptures in which he and the glossily pneumatic white-blond Cicciolina are having sex and nothing is left to the imagination. The effrontery of these photorealist paintings, with cocks and cunts presented front and center, isn’t so much in the X-rated material as in their gaudy narcissism—in the cheerfully salacious swagger with which Koons shoves his lady love and himself in our faces.
Jeff Koons: Michael Jackson and Bubbles, 1988 <http://tinyurl.com/p9l5nvo>
But the tough-guy swagger is invariably a central element in the Koons operation, even when the subject matter is only kid’s stuff. Everybody involved with the work seems fascinated by the in-your-face mood. Even when Koons is lighthearted, as with Play-Doh, his admirers are raising the stakes. Jerry Saltz, although uncertain about what he actually thought about Play-Doh, says that he “flashed on Koons as a modern mound builder, making sculpture that is instantly archeological, mystical, able to mark a future burial of contemporary culture.” And Peter Schjeldahl, if it’s possible, pushed even farther, arguing that Play-Doh “might stand as an imperishable symbol of art’s present unworldly estate: child’s play in a game with no-limit stakes.”
Koons is a high-end purveyor of the literal and the obvious. That makes him the perfect artist for an era when everybody from the couch potatoes who are only now wearying of reality TV to the politicians in Washington who have made realism their watchword will assure you that the promise of something different or better is no more. The twenty-first century is proud to be done with the ideal. And if there is one thing that you can say for Koons’s work it is that he deals in what is taken to be the real—even if the real is an act, a fake, a copy, an impersonation, what might be called the really unreally real. There is nothing on Planet Koons we haven’t seen before, admittedly generally in smaller, less costly, less shiny versions. His work is the apotheosis of Walmart. For the sophisticated museumgoing audience, which is inclined to boycott Walmart because of the miserable way it treats its workers, Koons’s supersized suburban trinkets can be a smarmy guilty pleasure.
Nothing is left to the imagination in Koons’s work. That, so I believe, is the source of the almost limitless fascination he exerts. His elaborate matter-of-factness makes him a populist of sorts. He likes to explain that a recent series of sculptures, in which replicas of classical statues are juxtaposed with blue gazing balls, was inspired by the gazing balls on lawns in rural Pennsylvania, where he grew up and now has a vacation home. “I want my work to be accessible to people,” he told a reporter at the opening of the H&M store on Fifth Avenue.
Koons is a recycler and regurgitator of the obvious, which he proceeds to aggrandize in the most obvious way imaginable, by producing oversized versions of cheap stuff in extremely expensive materials. It is only when he rejects the real in favor of the surreal that the audience’s interest begins to cool. In his recent paintings he has created what amount to photorealist collages, with inflatable toys, cartoon characters, classical statuary, and details of a woman’s hot-red lips or sexy head of hair layered and juxtaposed to create trippy Pop fantasy visions. These 3-D surrealist dreamscapes, with their echoes of Dalí—Koons cites Dalí as a major early influence on his work—are almost invariably said to be his weakest stuff. The public wants its Koons real rather than surreal. People want their Koons straight up, unadulterated. Koons is here to prove that in our been-there-done-that society metaphor and mystery and magic are dead and gone. It all comes down to familiarity.
The Koons retrospective is a multimillion-dollar vacuum, but it is also a multimillion-dollar mausoleum in which everything that was ever lively and challenging about avant-gardism and Dada and Duchamp has gone to die. I am aware that some people embrace Koons because they believe his armor-plated work is a necessary evil, the tougher and cleverer product that art must become if it is to survive. Of course they see that Koons has put the readymade on steroids. But that, so the argument goes, is what is needed to give Duchamp’s nerdy anti-art a fighting chance in our media-mad world. However persuasive it may seem to some, this argument, which is pure art world realpolitik, has the effect of shutting down the discussion we really need to have, which is about the ideas and (dare I say it?) the ideals of the Dadaists, and the significance of anti-art a hundred years ago and its potential significance today. Frankly, I wonder if those who hail Koons as the high-gloss reincarnation of anti-art really know what anti-art is all about.
Scott Rothkopf, the curator of the Whitney show, who has been praised for his streamlined installation, makes a rather telling historical misstep at the very beginning of his catalog, even as he is arguing that we must understand Koons’s work “through the lens of the readymade.” Rothkopf asserts that Duchamp “first exhibited his urinal in 1917.” The trouble with this statement is that Duchamp never actually managed to exhibit the urinal that he purchased at the J. L. Mott Iron Works on Fifth Avenue and dubbed Fountain. After heated debate among the organizers of the first exhibition of the Society of Independent Artists, Fountain was not displayed, although this was an organization with which Duchamp was closely involved and that had intended to exhibit anything that was submitted along with the $6 entrance fee.
There is some possibility that Fountain was hidden behind a curtain at the exhibition for three days, but what is certain is that Duchamp took it to Alfred Stieglitz, who made a photograph that appeared in a little magazine called The Blind Man. The work itself disappeared not long after; it is only replicas of the urinal that were eventually exhibited in public, many decades later. My feeling is that Rothkopf, immersed as he is in Koons’s virulent brand of exhibitionism, can hardly grasp the extent to which for Duchamp the readymade was a private avowal, an act of inwardness, an effort to see what art was and was not and could and couldn’t be for him.
Dadaism, which erupted a hundred years ago in the midst of World War I, may be one of the most misunderstood developments in twentieth-century art. There is a purity, almost an innocence, about the carnivalesque impurity of the original Dadaists and their objects and their ideas. So far as I am concerned, Jeff Koons has as little to do with Duchamp as he has to do with Bernini or Praxiteles or any of the other historical figures whose names are invoked in relation to the follies he calls art. Koons’s show-offishness is almost the exact opposite of Duchamp’s reticence. Art, Duchamp worried, is “a habit-forming drug,” and with the readymade he somehow hoped to break the habit, which is perhaps what every artist hopes to do by inventing art anew.
Jean Arp, one of the very first Dadaists—he was also and almost simultaneously one of the great classicists of twentieth-century sculpture—wrote that “Dada wished to destroy the hoaxes of reason and to discover an unreasoned order.” The delicacy with which Arp describes an old reason being destroyed in order to discover a new, “unreasoned order” (ordre déraisonnable) has nothing whatever to do with the chilly, pompous certainties that fill the Whitney. Koons’s overblown souvenirs are exactly what Duchamp warned against, a habit-forming drug for the superrich.
Dada—whatever its deficiencies, and the fact is that it produced relatively little enduring art—was part of a tradition of doubt about the possibilities of art that is woven deep into the history of art. You can trace this tradition back to the accounts in Pliny and other historians of the struggles of ancient painters to disentangle the relationship between the natural world and the pictorial world. The tradition runs through Michelangelo’s Neoplatonic worries about the conflict between the material and spiritual powers of art. And it reaches a first tragic climax in Chardin’s statements about the uselessness of artistic training as a preparation for the real challenges of art and his haunting confession that painting was an island whose shores he doubted he even knew.
There is not a shred of doubt in Jeff Koons. And where there is no doubt there is no art. Those who care to understand Duchamp’s impact on recent art must look elsewhere—perhaps to the enigmas and paradoxes of Robert Gober and Vija Celmins, two artists who keep some of Duchamp’s quixotic elegance and eloquence alive. But Gober and Celmins are artists’ artists. That is what Marcel Duchamp and the rest of the Dadaists were, at least for most of their careers. Koons is a publicist’s artist.
Might does not always make right, although that would seem to be the proposition on which Koons’s current lofty position is based. In art history departments there is nowadays an inclination to submit all art to a sociopolitical analysis, which is convenient when critics and scholars want to rationalize the considerable attention they pay to Koons’s marketing strategies. Too many column inches have been wasted on his stint in the early 1980s as a commodities broker on Wall Street and on his powers of persuasion when it comes to pushing art dealers to bankroll the extraordinary production costs involved with his work. Why should we care about any of this? When was it that the art of the deal became the only kind of art that art people want to talk about?
For Koons’s supporters, his business savvy, with its elements of risk-taking and maybe even recklessness, is a new Gilded Age avant-gardism. His combination of in-your-face banality and in-your-face extravagance takes the place of what must by now seem the excessively earnest campaigns of the avant-gardists of earlier generations. From the first supporters of the Cubists to the critics and collectors who embraced Abstract Expressionism early on, the bewilderment one sometimes experienced on encountering new art was embraced as a complicated intellectual challenge, demanding new alignments of sense and sensibility. We are all acquainted with the derision with which Matisse’s Woman with a Hat was greeted at the Salon d’Automne in 1905 and the protests provoked by Nijinsky’s choreography for Le Sacre du Printemps in 1913.
For the Gilded Age avant-garde, such legendary events have become the model for new marketing opportunities, and there is an assumption that if the public has a very strong negative reaction to something—if a work of art disturbs or annoys or flummoxes some of the public—it most likely is important. Incredibly enough, there are highly intelligent observers who believe that Koons challenges them in more or less the same way that Matisse, Picasso, Nijinsky, and Pollock might once have done. In the very first paragraph of his catalog introduction, Scott Rothkopf quotes the late Robert Rosenblum, a distinguished student of nineteenth-century neoclassicism who doubled as a critic of contemporary art, declaring in 1993 that “Koons is certainly the artist who has most upset and rejuvenated my seeing and thinking in the last decade.” Later in the Whitney catalog, the art historian Alexander Nagel recalls his first encounter with Koons’s work—the “Banality” series at the Sonnabend Gallery in 1988—and explains that it “made me a little sick, even as I felt an almost irresistible invitation to submit to it.”
I would have hoped that by now everybody agreed that not all unease is equal. Why should we imagine that because once upon a time certain gallerygoers were troubled by something that they later came to admire, then it follows that anything that troubles a gallerygoer is necessarily worthy of admiration? Just because it makes you sick doesn’t mean that it’s any good. I am not saying that either Rosenblum or Nagel, both scholars widely admired for their erudition, would take this view. But there is no doubt in my mind that Koons is alert to a tendency on the part of the art audience to submit—to submit to something (to anything) that exerts a certain discomfiting power. This is the S&M of the contemporary art world, with the audience angling for an opportunity to grovel at the feet of the superstar.
In the run-up to the Whitney show, Jeff Koons posed for Annie Leibovitz’s camera for Vanity Fair, working out in his private gym and wearing nothing at all, his physique quite impressive for a man well into middle age. What on earth was the point? On the face of it, Koons’s Vanity Fair star turn looks tiresome, the swagger of a macho buffoon. And yet it does the trick. Koons is the bully in the playground. He is also the class clown. He will do whatever it takes to win, and in our winner-take-all culture that passes for profundity.
Of course even those who take a serious interest in Koons know that he’s also full of baloney. Roberta Smith, reviewing the Whitney retrospective in the Times, comments on his “slightly nonsensical Koonspeak that casts him as the truest believer in a cult of his own invention.” That is well put. The essential fact about the Koons cult, however, is not that Koons invented it, but that it has gained such extraordinary traction, in the art world and well beyond. Day after day, the crowds are lining up outside the Whitney, waiting to get in to see the Jeff Koons show. What are they to make of the tens of millions of dollars that have been squandered on this work? What are they to make of the critics and historians who are defending Koons with a belligerence that allows for no debate? And what are they to make of the Whitney Museum of American Art?
That Koons will be Koons is his own business. That he has had his way with the art world is everybody’s business. No wonder the people in the galleries at the Whitney look a little dazed. The Koons cult has triumphed. For his next project Koons should consider manufacturing a ten-foot-high polychromed aluminum Kool-Aid container. It could come right after Play-Doh in the “Celebration” series.
The New York Review of Books
© 1963-2014 NYREV, Inc.
Sunday, September 7, 2014
Saturday, September 6, 2014
A small room inside a bay window. A single bed, a table and chair, and a sink. I could manage something larger, with more conveniences, but I could never match the view.
Home now. The groceries on the table, still in the bag, the celery sticking out the top.
The contrast -- the relationship -- between the celery and the bag's paper.
Electrically green, and the bag a somber brown.
I close my eyes and dream of my mother arranging things below a sign that reads USED PIÑATAS. She pretends not to notice, even though I am travelling a 100 miles an hour.
Friday, September 5, 2014
Thursday, September 4, 2014
Ai Weiwei
Among the many exhibitions opening this week and next week, I would recommend a visit to the Morris and Helen Belkin Art Gallery for Ai Weiwei New York 1983 - 1993.
Equal parts street photography and sly ethnography, this sequence of 227 black-and-white pictures (captured and selected by the artist himself) contains within it kernels of the world we are living in today.
Yesterday Canadian Art published my preview. Hopefully they will make space for someone to write a more comprehensive piece, one that speaks to the elements contained with this nicely-braided installation.
Wednesday, September 3, 2014
Edward Hopper
Last Sunday I posted a book cover that features a reproduction of Edward Hopper's High Road (1931). Yesterday I looked up High Road and found that the book cover contains only a detail (the left quarter of the painting is cropped). Not only that, but what I thought was a body of water in the distance is a bluff. Suddenly my relationship to this painting changed, and I have yet to see it in the flesh.
Nineteen-thirty-one was a busy year for Hopper, and a terrible year for the United States, whose GNP fell by 8.5%, and whose unemployment figures rose to 15.9%.
Here is another painting Hopper made in 1931, entitled Freight Car at Truro.
Hard to tell if the freight car is derailed, or if the track is covered in dust.
Further down the line, New York, New Haven and Hartford (1931).
And beyond that, The Camel's Hump (1931).
Until we come to Hotel Room (1931), where a woman in a bathing suit sits on the side of the bed reading a large paperback book.
Too large to be a Bible. Even larger than the book that inspired this post.
Tuesday, September 2, 2014
Empire Line (1998)
Artist Antonia Hirsch is a former Vancouver resident now living in Berlin. This Saturday she is opening a new exhibition at SFU Gallery (Burnaby), entitled Negative Space.
Here is what artist Marina Roy wrote about Hirsch's Empire Line (1998) on the occasion of the Vancouver Art Gallery's 2001 These Days exhibition.
Monday, September 1, 2014
"subject line"
Tiziana La Melia is a Vancouver-based visual artist who writes poems, some of which are about, amongst other things, haircuts, make-up and clothes; some of which can be found here.
This Friday an exhibition of La Melia's work and the work of Chief Beau Dick, Dan Graham and Jeremy Shaw will open at Macaulay & Co Fine Art, under the title Altered States.
The poem below is, amongst other things, La Melia's response to Ezra Pound's "The River-Merchant's Wife: A Letter" (1917).
subject line
/.
the first major
line i stole in my
20s was from
ezra pound
who translated the line
from a chinese poet
Li Po
a line about a hairstyle
graphically producing a line
the line along the forehead
of a girl
i took this being unformed
and ill formed
and emotionally ill
those were forming years i
can't undo, i try
the line was something like
i cut my hair straight across my forehead
in the original poem, his
and his
and mine
about some girl
bent over
working.
i picture her grey-blue dress
something a mennonite might
wear, but without the gathering
below the waist
an identity crisis
again and cut
my bangs again.
i look like an
earlier self,
i do not mind.
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