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The Ken Johnson - Michelle Grabner controversy

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Michelle Grabner, untitled, 2012


I've never seen a Michelle Grabner solo exhibition.  But individual pieces, similar to the above, have been  shown in a number of exhibition spaces around town.


Not that I have anything against a red-checkered  tablecloth, but I don't  think it belongs on a gallery wall.    Are there too many art exhibition spaces and not enough artists ? 

So, belatedly,  I am among those who appreciate the impatience expressed by  last year's  controversial Ken Johnson review in the New York Times.  He concluded his brief comments with:


Nothing in all this is more interesting than the unexamined sociological background of the whole. If the show were a satire of the artist as a comfortably middle-class tenured professor and soccer mom, it would be funny and possibly illuminating, but it’s not.


The "all this" to which Johnson refers is the video and the installation of family pictures and crushed garbage can lids that accompanies the graphic work.  The video depicts the artist working in her rural studio and  its bucolic surroundings.  There are also peaceful scenes of pies baking, suggesting the artist's other role as happy homemaker.

If Johnson had left out the phrase "soccer mom", he probably would have escaped unscathed. But  it allowed the art critic of the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel to assert
that:   "New York Times art critic Ken Johnson effectively called artist Michelle Grabner a dull, middle-class soccer mom"

Then taking yet one more interpretative step, the columnist at Hyperallergic asserted that:


Grabner may make “bland art” (his words), and she may be a “middle-class tenured professor and soccer mom,” but to establish a cause-and-effect relationship between those two conditions, as Johnson does in the paragraph, is sexist (and classist).


This interpretation  has traveled such a distance from Johnson's original words, it is only credible with reference to allegations of his previous expressions of sexism. (which I'm not going to examine)



In a comment to the ARTF CITY  posting on this issue , Grabner herself wrote:


I have no problem that Johnson did not identify David Robbins's didactic video, "A Few Minutes with Michelle Grabner" made specifically for my exhibition at James Cohan Gallery as hyperbolic and ironic My problem is that Johnson's art review was not printed in Thursday's Style section.


If the video was meant to be ironic, to what was it contrary ?  Does it suggest that Grabner does not really lead such a sweet, domestic, bucolic life ?  Does it suggest that such a  life is not worthy of admiration, or is merely a fantasy ? Was the bit about mathematics in the creative process also intended to be ironic?

If the art feels bland, why not conclude that the art was also intended to be ironic?  As if to ironically say "this is the kind of art that contented, domestic women make. (despite their application of mathematics)" 

That was the plausible message that Ken Johnson received, and he did not find it interesting because he did not find a sharp insight into that social context. And, by the way, no sharp insights were suggested in any of the four essays that labeled him a sexist.

Corinna Kirsch Jillian Steinhauer,   and Rit Premnath all emphasized that part of the video where Grabner discussed her creative process. Kirsch even  contrasted Grabner's  "authenticity" in contrast to "bad-boy-postmodern ironic stance", so apparently, she did not find the video to be ironic at all.

Mary Louise Schumacher tells us that the video is;  " a wonderfully droll and camp anti-commercial that's typical of Robbins' work and that invites us to explore ideas about Midwesterness, boredom, intended audiences and serious artistic intention."  --

But how is that  different from just boring an un-intended audience with typical Midwesterness?  What sharp insight has the video offered to initiate a fruitful intellectual exploration?





I wonder whether these four women would have attacked Johnson if they had actually seen the show and also judged it to be bland.

The above images, taken from the exhibition that Johnson reviewed -- appear to be much more interesting than the three pieces that I've previously seen.   Possibly, I would have found this work  as compelling as some of Ethel Stein's geo-form weaving

Here is another show that also works with ordinary, everyday household shapes and colors, but which, upon close inspection,  transcends them with aesthetic delight.

                                                             ***************

If I had  found the work in this show to be visually bland,  it's success as a humorous or illuminating satire would not  have concerned me. Like Ken Johnson, I would have found the self-satisfaction in the video to be annoying. But the only art that makes me laugh is art that looks really good.  Such achievement is  always surprising.  And good looking art is also the only kind that illuminates me -- because it exemplifies yet one more delightful way of being human.

 Which is where I part ways with Ken Johnson and the post-modern critical community -- all the way back to Duchamps "Foundtain" and the  inception of  conceptual art.

                                                           
But if  I had found the work, though minimal, to be visually exciting, I would have found the video to be charming and playful.   "Good for her!"... I would have thought ... "She bakes pies and makes good art, too.  Can I have a piece of both?"


                                                                ****************

The  world  of contemporary art honors both the conceptual and the visual - so possibly, Grabner ambitiously tries to work both ways.  Sometimes, she offers art that is bland enough not to interfere with the conceptualization intended. .  Other times, she may try to make art that can command attention, regardless of context.  Though I have not yet seen her achieve that, and the establishment of context seems to be the most important part of her practice.







  











Smart Museum: Objects and Voices

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Alfred Kubin (1877-1959) , "A Corpse in the  Countryside", 1919



This small etching with its documentary sense was the catalyst for my project. Without a doubt, it is one of the most haunting images 1 can remember seeing, One wonders why Kubin chose an indirect medium, and one for making multiples?.... Kerry James Marshall



The University of Chicago labors beneath the weight of its intellectual authority, and unfortunately, so does its campus art museum.  Just as with most of the special exhibits at the Smart Gallery, this suite of one-room shows, each with its own curator, privileges concept over visuality..

Except for the 4-piece exhibit curated by Kerry James Marshall, who, unlike all the other curators, is distinguished as an artist rather than a scholar.

Placing two printed depictions of corpses back-to-back in the center of his room, he placed two life-size paintings of nudes on the two walls facing them.  One by Philip Pearlstein, whose nudes are more like furniture than the living bodies of humans, and the other by Sylvia Sleigh, who painted a roomful of buck-naked young dudes as a  feminist retort to the male gaze.

The Kubin lithograph really is eye-catching.   The corpse is so dramatically and realistically splayed out on the ground, it's impossible not to search for whatever details might explain this mysterious scene.  Perhaps some parts of it began as a drawing, but it's hardly surprising that Kubin took it to print. .  Judging from what's up on the internet, his career consisted of making morbid/creepy prints.  This one is more natural and intriguing  than most.

Of course, what's missing from this room is the one kind of nude mostly common in the history of European art: the live, enticing, female.  KJM  steered clear from that most politically incorrect of images.

What's also missing is a good painting.




Miyoko Ito (1918-1983) - "Tamina or Claude M. Nutt", 1974


The Smart has a good collection of Chinese painting -  badly needed since the Art Institute of Chicago  gives so little space to that genre.

There was a roomful on display in this exhibit.   Unfortunately the reflections on the glass display cases made the pieces difficult to see except in detail - but aesthetic appreciation wasn't the topic of this display anyway.  The curator was only concerned with the authenticity of the ownership stamps with which the paintings had been marked. Ho-hum.

But there was also a room of Asian-American art -- and this was fascinating.

My favorite piece is shown above - so glorious, mysterious, and sensual. My internet image does not do it justice.







Leonard Tsuguharu Fugita (1886-1968), "Three Figures", 1918





 
Leonard Tsuguharu Fugita (1886-1968), "Danse Orientale", 1919-1920



Here's a discovery for me - a Japanese artist who  joined the French avant garde  - and seems to have been inspired by Byzantine or Persian painting.











Qi Baishi (1864-1957)



As a wanna-be Mandarin,  I prefer the aloof posturing of more aristocratic artists. 

But it's impossible not to smile at this robust  sense of immediacy.

Probably because, like Baishi, I remain a peasant despite my intellectual pursuits.





 
chicken shit calligraphy?







Tosu Mitsunari (1646-1710)
















I can't recall what curatorial theme encompassed this pleasant screen.

Very relaxing -- with fresh, vibrant details












Suh Si-Ok, Korean, b. 1929
"Mother and Child", 2007




Here's some contemporary calligraphy that has recently been donated to the museum. It's quite charming - and seems to transition from calligraphy into abstract-figurative art.

It's a pieces that took 3-minutes, and 78 years, to make.

I would like to see the AIC do a retrospective on this artist -- but given his distance from post-modernism, that's not going to happen.










Teshigahara Sofu (1900-1979)
"Origin of a Stream", 1950's


Here's some abstract-expressive calligraphy from the founder of Ikebana (a school of Japanese flower arrangement).

It kind of resembles the paintings of Franz Kline from that same decade.  But it's not about personal angst so much as the enjoyment of natural forces - flowing, erupting, balancing.

Regretfully, that kind of positive attitude is tangential to contemporary American art.


 

 
 
 
 Lee Ufan, born 1936
"From Point", 1976
 
 
This piece seems to straddle the worlds of traditional aesthetics and conceptual art.
 
If you feel that it's tedious or formless, you might be inclined to recognize it as some kind of important inquiry into mental or physical processes.
 
If you feel that it's beautiful, you might just enjoy it as I do.
 
 
 
 
 





 
Romare Bearden (1911-1988) "The Stroll", 1968




Here's a very nice Bearden collage that's been promised to the collection.  So jazzy, so hip.

It feels like a marching band, even if it's only people walking down the street.

















 





French-Flemish , Burgundy, 1350-1400




A cute piece - resembling a ship in a bottle






 

French, School of Moissac, 1120-1150

A very lively architectural fragment -- broken but still powerful.

It's  the kind of thing that inspired early 20th C. sculptors like Henry Moore.








 

Attributed to Kandinsky, 1914


Apparently, there is a break in the provenance, so it's authenticity remains unproven.
But who else could have painted it? 





It's very strong in the areas of detail.


 



William Turnbull (1922-2012)
"17-1963" (mango), 1963
 
We're told that this painting recalls an aerial view of a river running through a forest in Southeast Asia.








 



I was hoping that this area of detail would show the mottled quality of the surface..

But this is another painting that translates poorly in reproduction.



 





Alice Neel (1900-1984)
"The City", 1940's




































 



In Praise of Gwynn Murrill

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Gwynn Murrill states:


 “My interest lies in the fact that I use the subject as a means to create a form that is abstract and figurative at the same time. It is a challenge to try and take the form that nature makes so well and to derive my own interpretation of it.”


This duality sets her apart from most of the animaliers of today -- but joins her to many sculptors of the past.

Like ancient Egypt, for example:







She doesn't do wild animals - she does those family members who happen to be dogs, cats, or horses.





 
 
Sweet -- funny -- strong
 
A good combination.
 



 



All that's missing is an elegant young lady holding the leash.  (hopefully as nude as her canine companion)






 







But then, for some reason, a few years back she did a series of coupling human figures.

One reviewer thought they were having sex -- the artist calls them "wrasslers"

Either way (and they could be doing both) they're interesting -- but unfortunately the small image shown above is the only one available on the internet.


 

 
 

El Arte En La Vida

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El Arte En La Vida is a prolific blog of contemporary art.





Laura Nucenovich  (Argentina)



As it does something clever  to attract attention, this is typical of the sculpture shown.  



Jonathan Owen (Great Britain)


 
 
But cleverness is a one-and-done kind of experience.







Guy Dill (United States)


 
 
What interests me more are pieces that may, or may not, feel clever
 -- but which have a more vibrant  inner life  -  or inter-connectedness  - of forms.
 
As in the above.










Fugino Sachiko (Japan)


This ceramic of a funky old  box is possibly  clever enough to attract attention.
 
But it also has the interior strength of traditional Japanese pottery.






Adam Henein (Egypt, born 1929)





And here are the many figure sculptors I discovered - all of them completely new to me - which was rather surprising since my figure sculpture website currently lists over 1300 sculptors who worked during or after the 20th Century.









Amancio Gonzalez (b. 1965, Spain)







 
Bruno Walpoth (b. 1959, Italy)







Daniel-Joseph Bacque  (1874-1947, France)











Eduardo Barnes (1901-1977, Argentina)








Hakon Anton Fageras   (b. 1975, Norway)





Manuel Mediavilla  (b. 1972, Spain)





Margaret Wozniak  (Poland-U.S.A.)









Pere Sala (b. 1962, Spain)







Rodney Alan Shaw (1935-2014, U.S.A.)






 
Sofie Muller  (b. 1974, Germany)







Stefan Bedrich  (1896-1982, Czech)









Steve Gibson (b.1964, U.K.)






Ugo Riva  (b. 1951, Italy)








Victor Rousseau  (1865-1954, Belgium)





 





 




My gallery Guide

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River North Area
Addington Gallery
Ann Nathan Gallery
ArchiTech Gallery of Architectural Art
Belloc Lowndes Fine Art
Carl Hammer Gallery
Gruen Galleries
Jean Albano
Lydon Contemporary
Maya Polsky Gallery
Perimeter Gallery
Printworks Gallery
Richard Norton Galleries
KM Fine Arts
Russell Bowman Art Advisory
Zolla / Lieberman Gallery
ZG Gallery
Judy Saslow Gallery

Zygman Voss



Michigan Avenue / River East/ Points North



Bert Green
Kamp Gallery(Winnetka)
Rosenthal Fine Art Inc.
Valerie Carberry Gallery
Jennifer Norback
Richard Gray
Gallery 180



West Loop / Pilsen Area / The Chicago Arts District
Carrie Secrist Gallery
Frederick Baker Inc.
Douglas Dawson
kasia kay art projects gallery
Kavi Gupta Gallery
Linda Warren Gallery
EC Gallery
Mars Gallery
McCormick Gallery
Moniquemeloche Gallery
Packer Schopf Gallery
Peter Miller Gallery Ltd.
Rhona Hoffman Gallery
Thomas Robertello Gallery
Western Exhibitions
Robert Bills



North / Bucktown / Wicker Park Area
Chicago Art Source
Havana Gallery, Ltd.
Park Schreck
65 Grand
Chicago Art Source Madron Gallery of American Art
Thomas Masters Gallery
Iceberg Projects
Corbett Vs. Dempsey
Century Guildor here
Shane Campbell
1837 Grand

Other Chicago Area Galleries



Chinese American Museum
33 Collective Gallery
Aaron Galleries
Armstrong Fine Art
Firecat Projects
La Llorona Art Gallery
Zhao B. Center




Chicago Art Museums and Collections
Art Institute of Chicago
DePaul University Museum
The DuSable - Museum of African American History
Illinois State Museum
Institute of Puerto Rican Arts
American Indian Museum
Loyola University Museum of Art (Loyola University)
National Museum Mexican Art
Museum of Contemporary Art Chicago
The Oriental Institute Museum (U of Chicago)
Polish Museum
Smart Museum of Art (U of Chicago)
Logan Center (U of Chicago)
Gallery Guichard
Spertus Institute
Swedish American Museum Center
Ukrainian Institute of Modern Art
Krannert Art Museum , Champaign
Racine Art Museum
Kenosha Public Museum
Oakton Community College
Mccord Gallery (Palos)

Habsburgs at the Minneapolis Institute

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 Tintoretto (1518-1594), "Susanna and the Elders", 1555



A selection of  royal trappings (paintings, sculpture, costumes, armor, weapons, carriages, etc ) from the Kunsthistorisches Museum is now on view in  Minneapolis.  The focus is  more on the history of the Habsburg dynasty than the history of art, and the target audience seems to be age 15.   Many of the pieces, and most of the signage, does not interest me.

But it does include one of my very favorite paintings which, until now, I have only known in reproductions, the best of which, by the way, can now be found in glorious high-resolution on the Google Art Project. .About ten years ago, I made  my own version - now hanging from a fence in the  backyard.








One might notice that this dirty old man is  lurking rather than ogling.  Presumably because he, and the  lurker at the opposite end of the fence, are ashamed of their sinful concupiscence -- as should also be the gentlemen viewers  in the gallery,  as we gaze at the soft folds of  unprotected female flesh.






She's quite a woman -- even if a bit too plump for contemporary centerfolds.

By the way, you might notice how the edges along the right side of her body vary from sharp to blurry as her volumes weave elegantly back and forth in pictorial space. (which no photographic centerfold can offer)






Yes, the details are luscious - but actually - they are best seen on Google Art.

What can't be experienced online is the sense of the painting as whole, as it engages the space of the actual room and confronts the viewer with life-size human figures.

 




Hans Jakob I. Bachmann, German, 1574- 1651
Ivory Tankard with Lid, 1642


Continuing on the erotic theme -- here is one incredible display of carved ivory - wrapping itself all around this tankard.  Note the small cameo scenes on the bottom and top - as well as the magnificent frieze of interacting figures.













I don't find the faces of these frolicking girls to be very appealing -- but perhaps men of the 17th C. reacted differently.








Gallery signage suggested that this tankard was a wedding gift --- so all the drinking and  erotic play was appropriate for the  occasion
















Furienmeister, active in the first quarter of the 17th century
Crucifix, first quarter of the 17th century



The anonymous Furienmeister is so named because of the wonderful ivory furies  that he carved.

The job of Holy Roman Emperor was probably quite stressful.  But if he gets to wake up each morning and look at this crucifix on the wall above his bed, I might apply for the position.

There's an entire cathedral in that small space.







Everything about this piece is incredible -- from the overall  gesture of the entire figure, to the detail areas that are too subtle to be believed.






Did he spend an entire year carving this piece -- carefully planning how to proceed with each area of detail ?

By the way, one might notice that the ivory pieces in this show have been dramatically lit.  A spotlight shines into their glass cases - explicitly contrary to the advice given by the Smithsonian regarding ivory preservation. Assuming that the curators have not behaved irresponsibly, that might suggest  that there is some disagreement in the museum community concerning just how damaging these spotlights can be.

Without  strong, revealing light, it's hardly worth putting such carving on display, as I noted in this review of a recent show of Buddhist art at the Block Museum in Evanston.





 




Attributed to Balthasar Moll, Austrian, 1717-1785
Carousel Sleigh, c. 1740-1750


More wonderful carving -- but on a different scale.  This fairy-tale prop weighs 400 pounds














Regretfully, more  close-up images cannot be found on the internet - but the above gives some idea of its intense organic design --- as if conjured by Louis Sullivan.


 









Antonio Canova, 1757-1822 Emperor Franz II, 1805


This powerful bust  (and forehead! ) was commissioned as soon as the Emperor took possession of Venice after the treaty of Campo Formio .  It was displayed outside a Venetian library to reassure citizens of the Emperor's cultural responsibility.









Caravaggio,1571-1610
The Crowning with Thorns, c. 1602-1604



It's always a great event whenever a Caravaggio religious painting comes to America, since our museums don't have any.

As my wife's brother, an Evangelical minister,  noted:  Christ is being assaulted here by three orders of society: an aristocrat, a slave, and a peasant.







Correggio, 1489/94-1534 Jupiter and Io, c. 1530

There's a softness and wispy-ness about this painting that doesn't really attract me - even if it was
used to advertise this entire exhibition









These pieces  suggests that the Imperial court fluctuated between the extremes of piety and hedonism.





 


Giuseppe Arcimboldo, 1527-1593
Fire, 1566  (detail)


A man who invented his own genre.  And he was so good at it, no one else has tried to work it -- at least as far as I've seen..








Giorgione, Italian, c. 1477-1510
Three Philosophers, 1508-1509


Not many paintings are attributed to Giorgione -- and I'm waiting to see one that knocks the ball out of the park.






Hans Holbein  (1497-1543)
Jane Seymour (1509-1537), c.1536-1537



King Henry VIII liked her -- but there's much  spark in either her life or this portrait.

"Dutiful" is the key word for both.







Giovanni Battista Moroni, c.1520/1524-1578
Alessandro Vittoria (1525-1608), c.1552-1553


This portrait may not have Rembrandt's sense of self reflection -- but I really felt the presence of a young sculptor proudly showing off his work.

And it's strong, stately  design announces itself all the way across the room.













 


Niklas Reiser, active 1498-1512
Maria of Burgund (1458-1482), c.1500




A sadly posthumous portrait (she fell off her  horse while falconing)

But a wonderful portrait from an artist whom I had never seen.






"Venus adjusting her sandal", Roman, First Century




There was a case of small classical bronzes.  This was my favorite - though my favorite view was the long, slow curve of her back.






Titian c.1488-1576 Danaë, after 1554




I don't care for the old nursemaid, but I like the rapturous expression on the face of Danae.



The Chicago version



Apparently this theme was a big seller for Titian, so his workshop made quite a few, including this one at the Art Institute of Chicago.

Wandering through the Minneapolis Institute of Arts

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Here's an exciting discovery for me  - a lively conflation of Persian and Chinese painting in several folios of Hafiz-i Abru’s Majma al-tawarikh - an early 15th C.  history commissioned by Shahrukh from his capital at Herat (Afghanistan).

Unfortunately, the M.I.A. does not show these images online -- and it's difficult to photograph them through the reflective glass cases.  So all I can show is areas of detail.




















This scene shows Moses sending a dragon to attack Pharaoh.
 
It's a beautiful composition, I just wish my photo were better.




 
Timur defeats the Sultan of Delhi, Nasir Al-Din Mahmud Tughluq
, in the winter of 1397–1398, painting dated 1595–1600.


Timur's destruction of Delhi is one of the darker moments in human history -- but here it is gloriously celebrated by Bhora, an artist serving the Mughal emperor Akbar, one of Timur's direct descendants.

BTW - this painting was acquired by the museum at auction last year for about $50,000.  Which seems a small price to pay.  I wish  the Art Institute of Chicago had acquired it - but their priorities appear to be elsewhere.











St. Catherine (and Maxentius), Austrian 1450-1460


This is a very sweet  late Medieval sculpture.  I probably would have noticed it even in a much larger collection, like the Met's.







St. Catherine was brave and studious.  But here, she also appears  insufferably self righteous.
The smart school girl who knows everything.

This face does not feel generic, and  might be a portrait of someone the sculptor knew, Perhaps his daughter?







I actually feel bad for poor old Maxentius who persecuted her. It looks like the wheel has turned.








He appears  surprised - but also gentle.

Is this a self portrait?



 














 
Hans Schnatterpeck, Tyrolean, active 1472-1510
Lamentation,  1490's


"Following a long-established buying strategy, the museum is trying to snap up important pieces in fields that are currently unfashionable and therefore less costly"

The above was written by a reporter in 2011 -- and it's quite a tribute to the management of this museum. Apparently, this piece was purchased from another museum who sold it to raise funds to buy a Tilman Riemenschneider, who currently commands a much higher price.

Since it is displayed in a glass case, reflections kept me from photographing the entire piece - so the above was lifted from the internet.

But it's a masterpiece of that strong and expressive late Gothic style that was more popular in the early 20th C. -- and which remains so important to me.




 
 












 
It takes my  breath away.






So much inner vitality


 













I failed to shoot its label, but I'm guessing that this fine bust is also from the 15th Century. It has that stately innocent feeling of the early Renaissance in northern Italy --  expressed by sculptors like Mino Fiesole.





He's gorgeous.
 
I don't know whether it was intended to be erotic,
but did Gothic sculptors ever imagine young dudes this handsome?












Jakob Jansz (1474-1509), Netherlands


The above detail was taken from a "Presentation at the Temple" -- because I found the faces so sweet, familiar and alive.  Especially the girl in the center.  The girl with the birds is a very child-like  Virgin Mary.

This scene would lose much of its charm if an intimate space were not created by that column in the foreground.



 




Ghirlandaio (?) - portrait of a lawyer in the Aldobrandini family, c. 1550




 
 
 

These two fine Renaissance portraits are hung side by side




 

Moroni, 'Portrait of an Ecclesiastic", 1550-1575












The hands of the attorney are disappointing - and the Moroni is a stronger design - but otherwise they are both good representations of intellectual men - with a strong sense of character and vocation.

I wish Moroni could paint a portrait of me.




Cornelius Jacobsz Delff, (1571-1643)
Allegory of the Four Elements, 1600 (detail)










I'm currently reading a book about the observation of reality in Dutch still life -- and this might  be an example of categorization -- the metallic-ness of pots and the airiness of birds.

Though I'm afraid that here, the whole is less than the sum of its parts.







( THIS IS A POST IN PROGRESS  )






Brooklyn Museum 2014

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 Albert Bierstadt  (1830-1902), "Storm in the Rocky Mountains", 1866
 
 
 
The Brooklyn Museum is currently running a special exhibit of the celebrated Chinese artist,
Ai WeiWei, but I just couldn't muster the $30 admission fee to see conceptual art.  
 
 
So instead, we visited the rest of the museum - or actually - since time was limited - we just viewed one or two rooms of the American collection.
 
 
 
 
 
 
After seeing all the wall-size paintings on the fourth floor of MOMA the day before, I continued to wonder how anyone could prefer them to something more enjoyable - like the above.
 
There are artists who still paint the world as wonderful, scenic,  and glorious, but their work never makes it out of exhibitions of  "Western" art.
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 John Koch (1909-1978),"The Sculptor", 1964
 
 
 Here's a curious painter about whom I knew very little.
 
Time will reveal many more artists who did not join the trends of mid-century American painting.
 
This style seems to come from an earlier era, , but the coy, chaotic  sexual ambivalence of this piece is definitely connected to the sixties. .
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
"Light my Fire"
(the Doors first recorded  song with that title in 1966)
 
 
The luminosity here is so enjoyable--
and it's exciting to experience such visual complexity,
 even if it's not completely satisfying.
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Maurice Stern (1878-1957), "The Awakening", 1926 
 
Here's a 20th Century American figure sculptor who was completely new to me.
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

I like modern classicism - and this kind of reminds me of Gaston Lachaise.





 
But it did feel closer to an academic exercise
than a heart-felt expression.
 
Which may be why Wikipedia notes that  the artist is remembered today as
 the husband of a famous philanthropist.
 
 
 
 Frank Duveneck (1848-1919), portrait of Creifelds, 1876



"They are all portraits of very  ugly men... they have little grace, little finish, little elegance... their great quality is their extreme naturalness, their unmixed, unredeemed reality"... Henry James, 1875, discussing other recent portraits by Duveneck.

The above comment seems to relate more to the gritty subject than to the painted design that presents it -- which appears quite elegant and finished to me.

It's an early portrait by the dean of Cincinnati painters.





 





 William Glackens (1870-1938),  East River Park, 1902


This small park reminded me of the one about 6 miles north that I used to walk through  every morning when we visited my grandparents on the upper east side.







 
So many nice contrasts of sharp with blurry










William L. Hawkins (1895-1990), "Nineteenth Century Houses"



This was another exuberant large size painting that seems so preferable to what high end art galleries were showing at the time.

It seems to scream "I love my life!"

Unfortunately, my photos  of it were blurry -- and the museum only offers a thumbnail in deference to the image rights of someone (though the artist himself has been dead for almost 25 years)




 Lois Mailou Jones (1905-1998),
 Dans Un Café a Paris (Leigh Whipper), 1939



A curious painting that owes more to Cezanne than most other American paintings of that decade.

It came one year after the artist painted this more Afro-centric image.





 Robert Laurent (1890-1970), The Wave, 1926


 
 
A beautiful little art deco carving - it's more like decorative netsuke 
 than narrative figure sculpture








(image from the museum website)









Isamu Noguchi (1904-1988), My Uncle, 1934




Noguchi was quite an expressive  portrait sculptor before he went totally abstract.










Seymour Lipton (1903-1986), "Earth Forge II", 1955


There a certain grinding aggressiveness about this piece that reminds me of the sculpture of another New York sculptor/dentist from the 1950's.



 George Lovett Kingsland Morris (1905-1975),
Indian Composition #6, 1938
 
 
Quite a contrast to both the social realism of his decade - and the ABX that followed.
 
It seems to be a psychological self portrait.
 
Pleasant - but not earth shaking.

Chinese Painting at AIC - June 2014

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Chen Wu,  Orchids, 1832




With such a common name, it's impossible to  find this artist on the internet.

Which is another reason the museum should re-consider devoting an informational  website to its rotating exhibitions of Chinese painting.


This quarterly iteration of the small gallery is devoted to botanicals.

I wouldn't mind seeing an exhibit of just orchid paintings,
but there might not be enough in the museum's collection.








Chen Jiayan (born 1539),  1625

Obviously this 86 year old artist had aged quite well - still putting out a fresh green sprout every day




Xia Chang (1388-1470), Bamboo covered stream in spring rain, 1441


This is but one small section of a 50-foot scroll
painted in honor of a friend's bamboo grove.


According to the Met's website,
he was a high court official and  the leading bamboo painter of his time





Unfortunately, the museum's cases cannot accommodate a scroll that long.
We'll have to wait another three or four years to see another six-foot section.






I get a strong feeling of water rushing past
in this area of detail












Ni Zan (1301 - 1374)
"Poetic thoughts in a Forest Pavilion", 1371

The inscription reads:


In a forest pavilion, bamboo and trees give thickly overlapping shade.
Seeking friends crying "ying" - I too am fond of music.

Reciting to strings  (of the qin zither), scholars
are gathered and  seated from time to time.
In this district, Master Fu had only to play the qin.


On the 23rd day of the seventh month,
 I sketched this painting of Poetic Thoughts in a Forest Pavilion
and wrote the poem in
order to leave it behind for the multi-talented Youxin.










Extensive biographies on the internet would lead me to believe that this is one of the Art Institute's most important Chinese paintings, done in the early years of the Ming Dynasty by an artist who grew up in the Yuan (Mongolian) Dynasty.

Apparently his wealthy family gave him a good education, but civil unrest made him flee his home district and wander throughout southern China earning a living by selling his unconventional paintings.




 

I found the painting as a whole to be just too weird.
The sizes of the tree and rock are somewhat disturbing.
But as the artist wrote:


“I use bamboo painting to write out the exhilaration in my breast, that is all.
Why should I worry whether it shows likeness or not?”









On the other hand,
I love some areas of detail.







 






 



 

Reginald Mars at the Oak Park Public Library

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 In 1963, the Village of Oak Park commissioned Reginald Mars (1901 - 1973) to depict 10 seasonal recreational activities to adorn a newly built fieldhouse.  They went into storage twenty years later, and now have been cleaned and put on temporary display in the library.

This scene,  appearing in the Chicago Tribune last week,  caught my attention.   First, because it  reminded me that if you want to see lots of attractive, half-dressed young women, just go to a public swimming pool in the morning when they bring their young children to play.

Second, because it was obviously done by a talented, experienced illustrator who could draw figures and design with them too.










Unfortunately, these surfaces got pretty dirty in their public location, and the cleaning left them feeling as thin and faded as a fresco from the 14th Century.

But the drawing and basic design has survived -- to effectively depict happy, prosperous, suburban American life in the early 1960's  (back when I might have been a kid in the pool)

Though you might notice one thing that's missing: ethnic diversity -- which would have been a sensitive issue back in the 50's- especially regarding public swimming pools. (in Cincinnati, where I grew up, they were segregated )







 Here's my favorite -- I think the artist may have spent some time in the Buckingham Japanese print gallery at the Art Institute.











Hokusai













































 As often happens with the work of professional illustrators, these pieces look better in reproduction than they do in the original.






 Another nice composition.











 I'm sure that every village has a storeroom containing dark,old, forgotten paintings.

Some art lover must have stumbled upon  these and correctly guessed how good they once looked.

















Chinese Painting AIC September 2014

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 Chen Daofu, (1483-1544), Flowering Lotus, 1543



It looks like lotus will be the theme of  the September installation in the alcove of Chinese painting - but so far only two pieces have been installed.  The museum showed another painting by this artist last winter.








My friend, John Putnam, has own lotus pond that recently came under attack by a local raccoon.

But these lotus are better protected -and I could look at them all day









It's a subject matter  that seems to offer the opportunity to express hilarity.




































 





Li Huasheng (b. 1944), "Ten Thousand Acres of Lotus", 1991


This contemporary piece also feels hilarious - as hilarious as a small child's birthday party.

An artist of the Peoples Republic,  Li seems to looking at contemporary ABX artists like Cy Twombly as much as he's followed traditional Chinese brush painting.













Li Huasheng, 2001 (not on view)



In the 1990's, he stopped painting recognizable imagery, and began compulsively putting marks on the paper.

Hopefully, he'll eventually find this kind of work as tedious as I do, and will return to a more lyrical practice.

 
**************


.Returning two weeks later, I discovered that only one additional painting had been added - while half the cases are still filled with the botanicals that were put on exhibit last Spring.







Qing Dynasty, Bamboo and Rocks



This piece was impossible to photograph - and it's not yet listed in the online catalog. (1988.173)










Art Expo 2015

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Japan, 19th C.


This piece reminds me of when the Merchandise Mart simultaneously hosted fairs in both antiques  and  contemporary art.  These days, there is no good reason for Art  Expo  to include a gallery of historic Asian collectables.  Apparently, somebody knows somebody.

However.... this piece offers  a happy contrast to the bulk of what the other galleries have on display.  Contemporary art either offers a puzzle, or it  screams " Woo-Hoo !Look at me! Look at me!"








As a traditional expression of a spiritual practice that had been in Japan for a thousand yeas, there is nothing puzzling about this image, nor anything innovative in its forms or  materials.

Something much more important is at stake.

Better examples of Buddhist sculpture can quickly be found --  but maybe not from the 19th C.





Nicholas Africano







Another anomaly in this show is  Nicholas Africano whose work has been shown by at least two different galleries  every year for at least a decade.

Apparently, there remains  a good market for his peaceful, moody, decorative kind of classical sculpture cast in glass.







Alfred Leslie, 1960

 Art Expo always offers many examples of mid-20th C. ABX painting. 

Many of them seem to record the dynamics of a struggling  human life - as well as dynamic designs and beautiful areas of color.






Last year, the art fair had examples of Leslie's later figurative work - which I also liked.

I'm guessing that he left abstraction when it stopped being essential to him. Good for him!





 






Alfred Leslie






Andy Pankhurst

There's never much contemporary figurative work  at these art fairs - but here's a nice one from a young British painter who paints the human figure as if it were an  apple in a still life.



Camilo  Restrepo

Here's a fragment of a wall size piece done by a young Columbian painter just out  of art school.





It offers endless visual variety -- and occasional fragments of text that advocate the legalization of drugs.


Jim Dine, 2015


I'm not a fan of Pop Art.

But Jim Dine is one helluva  ABX painter as he turns 80.


 



BTW - it turns out that he's from Cincinnati -- and we both went to the same high school.


 





Eric Fischl

Hah!  Here's a life-size depiction of people at an art fair




Here's my own version -- with yet one more fair-goer in the foreground to the left.





Eva Hesse


 
I feel her sculpture was joke-art, but this earlier painting by Eva Hesse is quite expressive.




Gertrude Abercrombie, 1946


This is an  early work by a painter who has never disappointed me.  The gallerista told me that the young Edward Gorey met and greatly admired her.  That's not surprising, is it ?







Andrew Holmquist

Here's a young painter from small-town Minnesota who consistently blows me away.  He just got an MFA last year

I wonder how far his human figures will ever emerge from his bodacious designs.  On the internet, you can find examples of his figurative illustrations for children's books.

If he could draw a more naturalistic figure, he could compete with the great Italian Mannerists like Pontormo.




















John Little, 1960

Here's another great ABX painter that Thomas McCormick has brought back for an encore

This wall sized piece feels like an epic.









 


Franz Kline, Study for 9th Street, 1951


Franz Kline insisted that he was not influenced by the tradition of Asian calligraphy, even though he's doing much the same thing as he designs a balanced component that will then be expressed as gesture.

The tragedy of the contemporary artworld is that it will not allow this practice to be developed as a  tradition.




Kurt Lewy, 1959

Here's a Belgian abstract painter that McCormick has brought in.

It looks like the floor plan for an inescapable maze.





Catherine Maize


Like the stone Buddha at the top of  this post, here's a painting that's less concerned with attracting attention than in holding it.






Mark Calderon


This sculptor does not specialize in animals -- but  he's very good with reptiles.

This piece reminds me of  Albert Laessle's turtle  that I saw at the Met last year.











Matt Bahen


This young Canadian painter makes me feel the heat and smell the smoke in this remote, backwoods location.  This painting is not about scenery - it's about experience.





Pam Sheehan

Here's another painting about  experiencing a place  - -- though, in this case it's at the center rather than the periphery of our civilization.

This is Fifth Avenue, New York -- right outside the Met on a rainy day.







Milton Resnick


I don't really like belly aches -- but looking at one is not so painful.







Not many paintings  take nausea as  their subject matter.






Sam Francis, 1965


As I've read, there was a period in this artist's career when he left large unpainted areas of white in  the center of his canvas.  As if he were drawing aside the colorful curtains on a stage for which there was  no performance.




 
John Santoro


I've always liked his paintings, which are as much about landscape as they are about paint.

He's another artist who was shown by two different galleries at the show.





Tam Van Tran

The viewer seems to be looking up from the basement of a building that's just been blown up.





Toshio Miyaoka

I've craved  more pool scenes like this ever since I saw one by  David Hockney






Werner Drewes, 1939


This painting, by a renowned teacher of abstract painting, has a rather dry, academic feeling to it.

But that, too, is part of life -- and I tend to feel good whenever an attractive young woman is not fully clothed.









David Park, 1957



Here are some naked young dudes who also appear to be doing nothing more than posing in the studio - and I like that too.




Tragically, this was done near the end of the artist's  brief life.







 
Raimonds Staprands

This is the sort of thing that I expect to see at the Ukrainian Institute of Modern  Art here in Chicago.

The artist was Latvian via Southern California.















Qin Yufen
 
 

This Chinese painter has regretfully taken her colorful, stringy shapes off the canvas and begun installing them around the gallery.






 



















Judith Goodwin, 1960


Here's another survivor from that second wave of abstract expressionists.

If you want to feel struggle and antgst -- she's got it.





 









Judith Goodwin, 1982


Her life feels more comfortable now -- but I still feel the edges of anxiety.




 










Emelio Vedova, 1962
 
 
 

This is the European version of ABX













David Sharpe

This looks like the map of a large, posh resort.

The artist must have moved into a happier place




 





 














Strolling through the annual Chicago Art Fairs

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(painting by Eric Fischl)



This is the 10th anniversary of Mountshang at the Chicago international art fairs - and here's what I've recorded so  far:





2006
2007(1)   2007(2)  2007(3) 2007(4)
2008(1)   2008(2)  2008(3)
2009        2009 (Next)
2010
2011
2012
2013
2014
2015


How have these exhibits changed over that decade ?

I'm no longer finding contemporary figure paintings that interest me.  What happened to Bo Bartlett? Or Odd Nerdrum ?  Or William Bailey? Or Claudio Bravo? or Vincent Desiderio?

I've never cared much for shock-art, but neither am I thrilled that that the fair has become more about decoration than anything else. Isn't one annual SOFA show enough ?






Death of a Critic

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This passage from his last review   exemplifies what set  Michael  Weinstein apart  from most of his colleagues at New City:

"The work is one of profound visual poetry that intensely personalizes one of the great themes of existence."

I doubt this photograph would affect me the same way. (the self dramatization in the reproduction feels stiff and frivolous). But the reviewer hazards to speak authoritatively about  "one of the great themes of existence".  He's not just writing about art.

His review of the Paul D'Amato exhibit at the  DePaul Art Museum was his most significant contribution over the ten years that I followed him.  Contradicting gallery signage, he confronted the politically correct "Black-is-beautiful" genre of photography.  That drew the ire of many concerned parties, producing the best online debate about a Chicago artist that I have ever read

So I appreciated the many eulogies and especially how his passing lead right into the art editor's discussion of the "death of art criticism".

 “In the last three or four decades, critics have begun to avoid judgments altogether, preferring to describe or evoke the art rather than say what they think of it.”  As an art critic who is also an editor, I admit that this descriptive mode is the most common and the most dangerous pitfall I encounter in my own writing and in the writing of the critics with whom I work.(Elliot Reichert)


Yes!  Even if the language, focus, and subjects of description are the consequence of prior judgments, it's the rare critic who owns and proclaims them.  Though, I would not call it a "pitfall".  It's more like an unwillingness  to climb the mountain of understanding to get a higher view. And I question whether those who exclusively apply the "descriptive mode" could offer a good discussion of judgment even if they wanted to.

Perhaps judgment is shunned by an  awareness of self limitation and the challenges faced by the artists being judged.  But time and money are not limitless. Everyone has to judge where to spend them. Some  kind of  art criticism is the unavoidable result.



In part, this move from judgment toward evocative description is predicated on larger shifts in the intellectual and political economies in which art has come to circulate in our time. Once the arbiter of good taste, the critic’s claim to expertise has been hastily discredited in the frantic rush to dismantle the hierarchies of power that became broadly perceived as the defensive barriers of art’s elitism. Criticism, a voice that was once conceived of as an independent mediator between public spheres and avant-garde cultures, is increasingly regarded as a quasi-contracted tool of the institutions and markets that exercise real power. (Elliot Reichert)

The need to arbitrate good taste disappeared with aristocratic culture, while avant-garde culture has been institutionalized within a global educational system.  It has been so successful at eliminating any kind of standard or expectation, it has rendered itself obsolete except for the inexperienced. Dada is now a hundred years old, though it is still presented as contemporary.

 The institutional theory of art best accounts for the cultural life of our age, and its voice can only be descriptive. Likewise, Science,   the most authoritative voice in the modern age,  basing it's assertions on reason and impersonal evidence,  can only speak of art descriptively.  There is no  credible ground from which market value can be challenged.


As a curator, I have witnessed firsthand how the available “knowledge” around an artwork is ossified in the various institutional apparatuses that craft the language of object labels, wall texts, elevator pitches and press releases. At the institutional level, the meaning of art is increasingly shaped by mechanisms that more closely resemble marketing schemes than scholarship, or even good taste. (Elliot Reichert)

An interesting testimonial.

An autonomous,  non-descriptive art criticism can be based on nothing more than personal  resources  and experiences with life, art, and other critical thinkers in a variety of disciplines. It is too flagrantly subjective to serve either academia or the marketplace. It will  always be inadequate and un-verifiable.

Without arbitration or explication, criticism is nothing more than a one-way conversation among art  lovers. Depending on the critic,  that can be enough.  Though I hardly ever find art criticism that reflects a wealth of experience, and much less that convinces me that something important was at stake. Blair Kamin, the local architecture critic, is a frequent exception.

If I ran the Art Institute

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The upcoming retirement of the museum's current director has got me thinking about how it might be run  differently.

Here is my discussion of that Director when he first took office four years ago  As he said in an interview at the beginning of his term:

 I want to strategically grow our collections. Collection growth is terribly important, and I'm speaking now with the curators. Maybe now is the time to ask, "Are we thinking strategically enough about acquisitions? Should we be trying to make some of the more transformative types of acquisitions as we've made recently, like with the (Kazimir) Malevich and the (Robert) Rauschenberg?


Here is my discussion of that acquisition; while here is my discussion of the pieces  sold to raise cash to buy it.

He would probably consider the subsequent acquisition of the $400 million  Edlis-Neeson collectionas  the highlight of his career, but I would call it an even worse disaster.  It commits significant museum wall space for the next 50 years to specific pieces of Post-Modern art, a genre that would appear to deny the significance of anything for longer than 15 minutes.

I would prefer that art museums went in precisely the opposite direction:   emphasizing temporary or rotational display over permanent  installation; and allowing a wider variety of genres to be displayed as contemporary.

But I've also read that museum leadership is talking about adding yet another building for additional galleries of contemporary and Asian art.  Hopefully that will take their East-Asian displays beyond Japan, and expand the contemporary displays to include work that is lyrical and maybe even beautiful.

Would it be too shocking for the museum to display a contemporary landscape that applies rather than deconstructs the tradition?

The search for a new director has begun, and the Tribune reports that the board is looking for another professional scholar.  But as with the current director,  what interests a scholar is not necessarily what looks very good.   Scholarship looks for  intellectual context, but I want museum directors who just want to look at art - the kind that demands endless viewing. 

Scholars should not run art museums any more than they should run opera companies.

Robert Natkin

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Robert Natkin (1930-2010)
Untitled, 1957 (74" X 86")



It's hard for me to believe that the heroic painting shown above remained unsold and stashed away in the artist's studio until now.

It's also hard for me to believe that the artist was 27 when he painted it.

But the world of art is full of surprises.









Not that I am recommending its dismemberment, but it could be cut down into about a dozen wonderful paintings.










Every area seems to open up endless vistas of  delight.- much like Kandinsky's Campbell panels, painted 40 years earlier.







And it seems like an exhaustive catalog of what kinds of things look good with each other.











Most amazing, of course, is that all these wonderful details fit together into a very large space.








How did the painter sustain so much focus?











Apparently he would soon require psychotherapy -- possibly to recover from the expense of so much manic energy.










Willem De Kooning's Excavation was installed in the Art Institute in 1952, and apparently this large piece (81" X 100")  was an important influence on this Chicago artist.

But Natkin's painting seems driven by the thrill of beauty rather than anxiety and compulsion.  Unfortunately, that must not have appealed to buyers of contemporary art, in either Chicago or New York, during that period.








This is a work from the early 1950's - when the artist had just graduated from the Art Institute..

I would not have minded if he continued to bring Matisse to the Midwest - but he soon abandoned that project.











Here's another piece from the mid to late fifties. There is a greater feeling of effort and struggle.  It appears that the artist was trying not to do the same painting twice.


















Here's another large one from 1957 (102" X 80")

I don't know which large painting was done before the other - but some large shapes in this one seem to be looming - as if to suggest impending trouble.

It's hard to be an impecunious young person with big dreams.






Here's the artist standing beside it.

What a fine young man!





























1958 - pastel



I love how the emptiness of  that big lasso shape sets off the entire design.























There seems to be an endless - and successful - experimentation with varieties of mark making.








1958


All it needs is a few figures to become a mythopoetic scene.








***************



This is the kind of  show that makes me appreciate the gallery that presented it even more.

If Thomas McCormick did not have a gallery -- not only this show, but this entire genre of mid-century ABX would likely not be shown in Chicago  today - just as early 20th C. Chicago landscape painting disappeared from view when R.H. Love Gallery closed its doors.



James Hyde

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James Hyde


Volume Gallery is a small space in one of the westside  gallery buildings that I frequent. It specializes in decorative objects - like the above - which looks a bit too cute and uncomfortable to me. (but then,,, you would never want  to see how we decorate ourl living space!)





James Hyde


I'm also not  thrilled by these home furnishings that seem to practice the  'uglification" trending in certain corners of the contemporary artworld.




James Hyde


But now, this Brooklyn artist has  got my attention - with this conglomeration of glass and paint that reminds me of a muddy, trashy riverbank -- but much more beautiful.










James Hyde



And then there's  this set of paintings executed over ink-jet printings of spacious Western landscapes.








His colorful markings are so perfect for the deep, dry canyons that recede behind them.

It's exactly how I feel when visiting such places -- with my gangly, temporary human nonsense silhouetted against the eternity of natural forces. 




















 








This work gives me too much delight to be called 'merely' decorative.

It makes me happy to be alive.







The Art Criticism of Peter Schjeldahl

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Chardin, "Jar of Apricots", 1758

The philosopher and pioneering art critic Diderot reported that at the Salon of 1763 Jean-Baptiste Greuze, the leading genre painter of the day, was observed to pause before a Chardin, and then pass on, “heaving a deep sigh”.  I imagine Greuze thinking “Some guys have all the luck”  That painting, the Louvre’s “Jar of Olives” is not at the Met, but any of a dozen that are could have stung Greuze equally.  I recalled this anecdote while noting an astonishing color – a smoldering orange – that sounds a deep bass note in the “Jar of Apricots” (1758). Were I a rival of Chardin’s, I might briefly consider hanging myself.--Peter Schjeldahl, excerpt from "Stillness", New Yorker Magazine, July 17, 2000


By way of introducing his audience to the art critic, Peter Schjeldahl , Steve Martin, the entertainer and art collector, read the above excerpt on his on-line interview .

He contrasted it with the following  example of "art talk":






Ginger Wolfe-Suarez and her installation




Wolfe-Suarez explores the psychology of built space and perceptions of place while re-engaging notions of sitespecificity. Approaching fragility and impermanence, the material, textural, and odiferous with the same complexity as site and scale, Wolfe-Suarezʼs sculptures operate phenomenologically, the exhibition space reformed into a temporal and experiential zone for the viewerʼs body. Utilizing a material palette of wood, rock, paint, transparencies, light, yarn, as well as various odors and scents, “Memory Objects” includes recent sculptures and installations questioning how moments are made physical. Wolfe-Suarez negotiates a tension between presence and non-presence, dispelling notions of reduction, in what the artist terms a “symbolic abundance through absence."
........LTD Los Angeles

Since it takes about three seconds to find it with Google  Martin was rather disingenuou to claim ignorance of it's source.  But as you can discover , the above text comes from a gallery press release.  It has been targeted at a specific audience of academics and collectors of avant garde art. And contrary to Martin's assertion, it does not use uncommon words (or common words in an uncommon way)   But it does aim at those who are more interested in analyzing experiences than in having them.

That same distinction can be found in Schjeldahl's two essays in the Dec. 21/28, 2015 edition of The New Yorker. His feature essay discusses the minimalist, Robert Ryman, while a shorter review discusses the Abstract Expressionist, Jackson Pollock.   They are the reason that I began to write this post.  But now that I've discovered his earlier essay about Chardin, I can't resist examining that one as well.

Ryman boors me.  Pollock disgusts me.  But Chardin!.  I LOVE CHARDIN!.

And happily, "The Jar of Apricots" is online at the Google Art Project





This must be an example of the "smoldering orange".  (the color - not the fruit)





The title of Schjeldahl's essay on Chardin is "Stillness".

It begins with these thoughts:

"...the most silencing of painters - put thought and emotion on hold with gentle sternness as if to say "no doubt you are intelligent and full of feeling,  but for the moment simply look, if you don't mind"

-- if you won't wholeheartedly contemplate it , it will have nothing to do with you. You must relax and gaze. No special effort or acuity is required, but patience is not optional. Gradually you are engulfed in mysteries of painting and of something else supremely indefinite - something about existence. 


I am also "engulfed in mysteries of painting and existence" by Chardin -- but also by every other painter whom I like.

And like Schjeldahl, I always try to  put my thoughts on hold when looking at a painting.  Let them come later. But emotion drives my involvement with art. (which can be a problem when I need to look at ordinary things for mundane reasons)









Chardin eschewed the showy, eye fooling sensations of Flemish still-life. With him, the illusion of reality is a conviction won on scant evidence. You buy it, but when you look carefully you can't say why, because what's there is just paint. Except in the smallest formats, Chardin's brushwork usually resolves into passing verisimilitude only at distances of between six and ten feet. Strong pleasure occurs at closer, blurring quarters. Standing back you see pictures that bespeak intimacy-domestic stuff, preoccupied, ordinary people. Approaching the canvases, you receive something actively intimate- the obsessive passion of the artist to wrest rightness from his material It becomes hard to distinguish awkwardnesses from inspirations. A smear of Orange tells everything knowable about light when it collides with the bottom of a copper pot.







Rubens, "Diana Returning from the Hunt", 1615 (detail)





Frans Snyders, "Market Day on the Quay", 1635-40 (detail)


"Showy" characterizes these Flemish examples better than "eye fooling" - which one might easier find in  Dutch paintings.

I'll have to experiment with viewing distance when I next see  Chardin at the Met. Chardin-size paintings usually put me about four feet away.

Schjeldahl's last  two sentences puzzle me. If "it becomes hard to distinguish awkwardnesses from inspirations" - and if any area feels like a paint smear more than anything else - then I would say that the painting has failed.

His  emphasis continues to be on paint rather than whatever it might represent. But if he is feeling the artist's "obsessive passion", he must not be putting his feelings on hold, as he earlier recommended.







 Chardin, "Return from the Market", 1739



Reddish smudges on the cheeks of a servant woman convey the hectic path of a busy day in “the Return from market”, but then, somehow, so does everything else in this eventful composition, including a tiny triangle of blue sky over the top of an open door. That blue patch nearly took my breath away. How does Chardin do it? He paints. He keeps reaping epiphanies that are within the reach of painting, because that – and not copper pots and servant women , is what he is about. He was the first painter to convince us that he painted purely for paintings sake, an example that was not lost on the greatest of those painters who learned from him, Edouard Manet. . .


On the one hand, Schjeldahl tells us that everything in this eventful composition conveys the hectic path of a busy day.  On the other hand - he tells us that it does so because the artist was about painting itself - not it's  subject  matter like copper pots or servant women. Can't he allow that the artist used the one to show the other?






Here's that small blue triangle (upper left).  It's a nice touch - but so is the servant girl who stands beneath it while answering the door  Her erect posture contrasting with the woman in the foreground who is leaning on the table as she finally sets down her heavy load.

Schjeldahl then introduces us to a discussion of 18th C. French painting by Michael Fried.  Entitled “Absorption and Theatricality”, it defines that practice as "A time consuming investment of the painter’s life that holds still to be realized by the viewer, whose life is correspondingly enriched."

If we allow that the artist's investment might be in a lifetime of study rather than just whatever time it took to make the painting, I would apply that definition to every  painting I like to see. In contrast to the definitions provided by contemporary artists , it is made to serve the viewer rather than the painter.


Chardin, "Soap Bubbles", 1733





The above painting is offered as an example of an absorption "so total that the presence of the work's beholder is negated"


Yes -- it does feel that way - in contrast to so many images, especially devotional ones, where the characters on the pictorial stage are there to interact with the viewer

Suggesting that this is a paradox (if viewers were absent, how would anyone know that they were being ignored?), Schjeldahl goes on to share other "outlandish" responses - and invites us to make up our own.  Apparently Diderot wrote that Chardin's harmony is like what theologians say about the spirit - sensible in the whole but secret in the details.

Diderot's analogy seems irrelevant. Not to be outdone, Schjeldahl proposes that Chardin's paintings appear to have been  painted by someone other than the artist, to be  viewed by someone other than the viewer. That one also feels even yet  more outlandish than insightful.




Chardin ,"Still Life with Hare", 1730









For me, Chardin’s most penetrating motif explicitly involves death: still-lifes with freshly killed game animals, notably rabbits. The subject came from a tradition of celebrating nature’s bounty, but there’s nothing festive in Chardin’s treatment of it. There’s nothing precisely sad, either. He isn’t propagandizing for animal rights. Bunnies get hunted, and that’s that. Moreover, he couldn’t render them with such fantastic accuracy if they were alive. It could be said that they died for art, that Chardin’s art hungrily consumes – beyond their marvels of shape, texture, and color – their very deadness. Here are creatures formed for motion that no longer move. They have embarked on the second career that awaits all beings, as inanimate objects of a special sort. They lie or dangle in eloquent postures that in life nothing can assume. They strike me as the deadest things in art – vibrantly, lyrically so. Is this disturbing? It is to me. It verges on an indecency that is all the more nerve-racking for having no touch of the grotesque, and for being firmly in the cause of beauty. The phenomenon of beauty can be a kind of murder, snatching something out of time and freezing it permanently.

Wow!  This is the paragraph that makes the entire review worth reading.

But please note -- Schjeldahl is no longer talking about paint.  This poignant reflection is all about subject matter and the dramatic, figurative gestures that express it.

As it discusses the naturalistic presentation of a timeless, impersonal subject matter - no more relevant to the artist than to any viewer - and more about life than art -- it exemplifies  pre-Modernist art criticism.


*****************



Jackson Pollock, "Stenographic Figure", 1943




Schjeldahl begins his  discussion of Jackson Pollock (December 21, 2015), with a career synopsis:



The trajectory of his too brief career retains a drama, as evergreen as a folktale, of volcanic ambition and personal torment attaining a lift-off, with the drip technique, that knitted a man’s chaotic personality and, with breathtaking efficiency, revolutionized not only painting but the general course of art ever after. (It can be argued, and has been, that the matter-of-factness of Pollock’s flung paint germinated minimalism.)


Did drip-painting germinate Minimalism?  That makes sense to me -- and I would add that the respectability of Outsider Art is another sprout from that wild seed.  But note that Schjeldahl only states this argument.  He does not endorse it.

Then, he takes us through the highlights of the MOMA collection:






Jackson Pollock, One Number 31, 1950






..perhaps his single most satisfying work, the songful “One: Number 31, 1950,” more than seventeen feet wide: interwoven high-speed skeins in black, white, dove-gray, teal, and fawn-brown oil and enamel bang on the surface while hinting at cosmic distances.

…. Drawing in the air above the canvas freed him from, among other things, himself. “Number 31” is the feat of a fantastic talent no longer striving for expression but set to work and monitored. He watched what it did. We join him in watching. Pollock redefined painting to make it accept the gifts that he had been desperate to give. Any time is the right one to be reminded of that.




Giotto, "Last Judgment) (Hell - detail), 1305


Pollock's Number 31 reminds me of Giotto's Arena Chapel -- but not the beautiful parts.

I suppose that chaos, misery, and despair needs some kind of  representation  to remind those who suffer that they are not alone.  But  thank  goodness that Giotto, unlike Pollock,  could paint saints and heaven as well.


Jackson Pollock: "She Wolf"

Here's another hellish image - about which Schjeldahl had this to say:

MOMA also has the transitional touchstone “The She Wolf” (1943)—a picture ferociously conflicted between Jungian voodoo and exasperated originality

Might we allow that a person may choose Hell - just others may choose not to follow him there?




..and a rough gem from the artist’s blocked, sad last years,
“White Light” (1954).

(two years later he killed himself and injured others while driving drunk)


 Pollock redefined painting to make it accept the gifts that he had been desperate to give. Any time is the right one to be reminded of that.



 Was American high-brow painting really improved by accepting these dark gifts ? Wasn't the ironic optimism of Pop-Art, as well as the nihilism of Minimalism a direct consequence? More positive expressions have been overwhelmed and marginalized - even if, like Ed Clark ,  they were early Abstract Expressionists.


*********************



  Robert Ryman, 'Arrow", 1976 




 As a response to the painful Abstract Expression of Jackson Pollock,  installations like the above seem to be saying "Stop it!"

It's not so much a self expression as the firm denial of one -- as if this white panel had been tacked up on the wall to cover something else. (the  four brutal  brackets are part of the piece itself).

Schjeldahl writes 1300 words about a Ryman exhibition  in the same New Yorker issue that he discussed Pollock.  His introductory paragraph concludes with:

There’s no savoring of style, just stark presentation. His work’s economy and quietness may be pleasing, but its chief attraction is philosophical. What is a painting? Are there values inherent in the medium’s fundamental givens—paint skin, support surface, wall—when they are denied traditional decorative and illustrative functions? Such questions absorb Ryman. Do they excite you? Your answer might betray how old you are.


Schjeldahl's manner may be respectful, even deferential,  but he he's telling us that Ryman is a philosopher, not a painter, and the questions that he asks may  be  dated. (BTW - he notes that Ryman, unlike Pollock, was not  trained as a painter. He came to NYC to become a jazz pianist. He got work as a museum guard at MOMA - and started hanging out with co-workers like Don Flavin and Sol Lewitt)


In his second paragraph, he outlines a brief history:


Ryman is rooted in a phase of artistic sensibility that was coincident with early minimalism and Pop, and is still in need of a name. Call it the Age of Paying Attention, or the Noticing Years, or the Not So Fast Era...... What you saw, while not a lot, stayed seen. The mental toughness that defined sophistication in art back then is rare now. Ryman’s Dia show is a spiritual time capsule. The work isn’t dated, exactly; it seems classical. But what’s missing is a confident assumption that there will be an audience eager to put up with it.



He's still toying with the idea of Ryman's work being dated, but not yet ready to commit to it. Though it's something of a stretch to call an all-white canvas "classical".  It's also a stretch to conflate "sophistication" with "spiritual"-- except as a  mockery of both.



    


Ryman, untitled, 1959


Here's an earlier piece that accompanied Schjeldahl's essay.  It looks like Ryman has not yet completely obliterated  the colorfully expressive painting beneath the  thick, lumpy paint that he lathered over it.  As Schjeldahl put it:

.The earliest of Ryman’s paintings in the show, made in 1958, are small, awkward, oddly charming arrangements of impasto strokes, which have a generic look of expressive painting—at a time when the swashbuckling style of Willem de Kooning was much in fashion—but are as matter-of-fact as cards laid out for solitaire. Ryman was likely affected by Jasper Johns’s recent, sensational “Flags” and “Targets,” in which sensitive-looking touches of thick paint wander like sheep without a shepherd



Sheep without a shepherd?  I like the gentle humor.

Here's his response to his favorite piece:


 If I could have one work from the show, to satisfy my somewhat equivocal appetite for Rymanism, it would be the delicately befuddling “Arista” (1968), a six-foot-square painting on unstretched linen, which is stapled to the wall and abutted, on the wall, by ruled lines in blue chalk. The lines suggest a guide to placement, but there they are in place, themselves, as the most interesting feature of the work. The particular meaning, if any, of a Ryman commonly tiptoes just out of mental reach.


.Unfortunately, images of this piece cannot be found online. Possibly it would have less impact than the above words. After a few more descriptions, we move toward a conclusion:


 Ryman’s reductions of painting to basic protocols are engaging only to the extent that you regard painting as an art that is both inherently important and circumstantially in crisis. You must buy into an old story, which bears on Ryman’s extreme, peculiarly sacramental standing in the history of taste.


 Which allows that it may be reasonable not to buy into a story that is both old and paradoxical - just like religious notions that require ever greater leaps of faith from one generation to another.


 Ryman’s is a kind of mute art that, generating reverent and brainy chatter, puts uninitiated citizens in mind of the emperor’s new clothes. (I have in hand, as tinder for such derision, “Robert Ryman: Critical Texts Since 1967,” a thick volume of often gruellingly dense essays.) Yet, actually, the populist fable rather befits the serious aims of Ryman and his avant-garde generation, who insisted on something very like full-frontal nudity in artistic intentions. The emperor—roughly, high-modernist faith in art’s world-changing mission—could retain fealty only if stripped of fancy styles and sentimental excuses. That was Ryman’s formative moment. It was succeeded by a suspicion, now amounting to a resigned conviction, that contemporary art is an industry producing just clothes, with no ruling authority inside them. 

Yikes! Not only does the emperor have no clothes (despite exhaustive critical texts that say otherwise) -- but the emperor no longer has authority anyway - at least, no more authority than any other very rich guy. That would be a rather harsh judgment - of both Ryman and the world of contemporary art (galleries, museums, universities, magazines, etc)  that celebrates him.

 But note -- Schjeldahl does not claim this "resigned conviction" for himself as an art critic. Instead, he steps back to give his report, as if he were a journalist or social scientist - just as he did with his insights connecting Jackson Pollock to minimalism.

Good art criticism may not be dead -- but it does need to present judgments as if they belonged to someone else..

************


 By contrast, here is a less ambivalent response , that celebrates Ryman as an innovative "Light and Space" artist, as well as a "master of white on white painting",  updating his sophistication from one  verbiage to another. In another conceptual update, white-on-white has  been re-phrased as Queer painting 

Meanwhile,  the conventional  Contemporary Art 101 response can be found here: "Robert Ryman is a wonderful reminder of the historical importance of the artist, who bridged Abstract Expressionism, Minimalism, and Post-Minimalism. Moreover, his work resonates with the liveliest contemporary practice, finding a place of honor within the current discourse about the medium of painting."

The Man Upstairs

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Milton Horn, "Who Walketh Upon the Wings of the  Wind"
Bronze, 39.75 inches (Detail) 1958





Bless the Lord, O my soul. O Lord my God, thou art very great; thou art clothed with honour and majesty.

 Who coverest thyself with light as with a garment: who stretchest out the heavens like a curtain:

 Who layeth the beams of his chambers in the waters: who maketh the clouds his chariot: who walketh upon the wings of the wind:

 Who maketh his angels spirits; his ministers a flaming fire:

 Who laid the foundations of the earth, that it should not be removed for ever.

(Psalm 104, excerpt)
**********




Once or twice a year, I type "Milton Horn sculptor"
into a Goodle search window to see what pops up. 

 A new exhibition? A new picture online? Whatever.

When I did that two weeks ago,
 I found an image of a statue called "Moses" on an  auction site
 along with the incredible news that the auction would begin
in TEN MINUTES.

Now I own it.







I first saw the piece when I was a teenager, about fifty years ago. My father had helped Milton build the armature for the monumental "Hymn to Water" and he drove us  up to Chicago one weekend to see the nearly finished work before it was cast.. I've written about that trip here . We spent the night in Milton's home, surrounded by his collection of Medieval, ancient, and Asian sculpture, as well as his own work - including this piece.




It was the only statue to which he gave an optional  spotlight. He clicked it on whenever I showed an interest in viewing it. . It's the only free-standing statue of Jehovah or Yahweh or the Judeo-Christian God that I have ever seen.       






But God  has also appeared in several sculptural reliefs, including his own,  In  "Hymn to Water",  God the sculptor, is modeling Man.





 Eight years earlier he represented the in-dwelling, feminine aspect of God, the Shekhinah, in a sculptural relief  on the outside wall of Temple Har Zion in River Forest, Illinois.







Looking back through art history, Michelangelo's God is the best known.




Here, God makes Man.





Here, God makes the sun and moon


This  face appears more severe and less loving that the one gazing at Adam.









Jacopo  Della  Quercia


Christian art has always been  more interested in statues of  Jesus and the Virgin Mary. They can serve as objects of devotion and supplication. God, the father,  is too distant - and dangerous..

Earthquakes, tornadoes, plagues, and tsunamis are  some of the  "acts of God".  Jesus would never harm a fly.

Here are a few more memorable representations of the Man Upstairs:



Jacopo Della Quercia


Lorenzo Ghiberti



Ghiberti's God is more like a quiet, gentle father than the force that through the green fuse drives the flower.

 
 
 
Lee Lawrie
 
 
 
 
 
Here's a 20th Century version found in Rockefeller Center - based on the painting by William Blake.
It seems to belong in a movie theater - or Disneyland.





Michelangelo's "Moses" is the statue that Milton Horn's God most closely resembles  -  in both turbulent inner energy and that fine pair of horns emerging from his scalp.

Michelangelo gave Moses his horns  because it's how the Vulgate Bible translated the Hebrew word for  "shining".

Milton Horn gave God his horns as a tribute to Michelangelo - thereby invoking art history as well as deity.







And one might note that God has turned his face away from the viewer to communicate with an attendant angel.  Perhaps the angel is dutifully awaiting a command - but as Milton once explained it to me, the angel is delivering a report - which makes more sense to me.





God was the prime mover - but He is not the continuous mover.  He put things in motion - and then keeps track of how things are turning out.

Which should let him off the hook for all the bad stuff that happens every day - especially to Jews in the early 20th Century.

The true believer cannot expect God to get him out of every jam.  But he can expect not to be alone.











(reminds me of Rembrandt's early etchings  depicting  old oriental men)






The face of God is interesting - but the important content of this piece is  turbulent, writhing power - the kind that spins out the galaxies as well as the double-helix of cellular biology.

It's as evident from the back as well as the front   --- because, of course, the universe has no front and back.







One might well think of this as an abstract sculpture -- which occasionally takes the form of recognizable human features.




The Divine Dance



Just noticed this little putto under God's foot -- just as cherubs accompanied the God of  Michelangelo.







Here is the piece currently on display in my office at the store.  God is flanked by the crown of His creation:  beautiful young women.

On the right, my father  presents "Gloria", his favorite model.

On the left, I present a Palette and Chisel model from about twenty years ago.

Showing my sculpture beside that of Milton and RJ is something of a dream-come-true for me.

Though - I might note that I am only person in the world who currently has any interest in owning these three statues.  Horn's piece cost less than half the cost of casting it. My father's piece is only worth the cost of its re-cycled bronze.  And my polyester resin piece is utterly ....... priceless.



Travail

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Milton Horn, "Travail"???, 1966, plaster

When I purchased "Who Walketh Upon the Wind" this piece was thrown in - presumably because it was not expected to sell by itself.  It's not a very pleasant subject matter - and it's just a plaster cast  - even if a unique one.

Not surprisingly, it was made - and hung - amidst a fine collection of Medieval European sculpture.






The piece is not mentioned in the 1989  Spertus exhibition catalog.  I believe it depicts the discomfort, anxiety, and even fear of an expectant mother.  I vaguely recall that it was called "Travail", but I'm not sure.






Milton Horn, "Pain", 1970 


A rather odd subject matter, isn't it?  Definitely in the tradition of Kathe Kollwitz.  Feeling  the pain of others is about as far from the post-war American mentality as one can get.

But Milton and Estelle were far removed from that mentality - even if they lived in a central Chicago neighborhood that was rapidly becoming  gentrified. They didn't even own a car.

As I recall,  Milton made a few other works on related themes, most notably "The Birth of a Poet" (1970), a bronze figure of a woman in a birthing chair and an infant emerging from her womb. Also there is "Travail"(1966) a 50" X 20" walnut relief which was probably based on the plaster piece shown at the top.

Regrettfully, a catalogue raisonné has yet to be published.




Cosmo Campoli, "The Birth of Death", 1950



Come to think of it, Chicago's Monster Roster from the 1950's were also influenced by Medieval and tribal sculpture - and the dark side of the human experience.

But, for the most part, their work belongs in a theme park's haunted house - rather than a temple, cathedral, or shrine.

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