Art

Stealing Lunches - Learning History

An artist must use recent and distant achievements in their art for education and inspiration.  You must know the work of your precursors on as many levels as possible.  You cannot not know the history of your art.  Imagine your art as an arena or as a schoolyard.  This schoolyard is full of upperclassmen and very tough classmates.  The quality of your work is directly related to how many of their lunches you eat or at least get a bite of prior to getting your ass kicked. The worlds of contemporary painting and music are over-crowded with wall flowers, people who huddle along the fences minding their own business, doing their own thing -  things that are always hermetic, untutored, pale, boring, frantic, peculiar, lame, self-absorbed and unfulfilling.  Get out in the center, walk up to Picasso, grab his lunch sack, add some onions or peppers to his bologna sandwich and call it your own.  The next day go over to Van Gogh, grab his lunch pail, take out his peanut butter sandwich and add some sliced banana and call it your own.  Every artist of note has confronted a wide array of precursors - they all got their asses handed to them, got their noses bloodied time and again for their audacity, for their courage.  They collected battle scars from their encounters with the work that defined their canon.

You can always spot an artist who simply looked at a lot of reproductions or visited a lot of museums and failed to actually experiment with paint - it is as if they had no encounters with the schoolyard dominators at all.  You can tell which musicians huddled over by the backstop with a small circle of admiring friends while the big boys controlled the center.  The torch of one’s art must be taken from many other artists who may be alive or dead.  You will get clobbered but there is at least a chance for a measure of pride for valiant effort.  Muhammad Ali, a great artist of the boxing ring, got hit so ferociously and so many times that he was permanently injured.

Force a series of encounters with the contenders in your schoolyard or be doomed to mediocrity.  “Hey Beethoven what did mommy pack our little music man today?”  “Jackson Pollock !  Yeah you - I’m talkin’ to you - let’s see it - what you got in the sack? Ouch!  Jackson packs quite a wallop.  “You guys wait here - I wanna bite of that Hendrix kid’s apple.”  Go after your precursors one at a time.  Get into their heads.  Steal as many of their ideas as you can process.  Picasso said, when accused of stealing ideas from other artists, “I steal from everybody - I try not to steal from myself.”

Anxiety of Influence - de Kooning / Picasso

Willem de Kooning’s access to Cezanne was blocked during his formative years, the 1930s and 1940s, by the feverish cult of Picasso thus he never saw Cubism for what it is, Cezanne shorthand, not some cosmic invention from whole cloth.  Jackson Pollock also suffered from this myopia. These two painters banged their heads silly against Picasso like loose shutters in a hurricane while the magic, beauty and grace of Cezanne eluded them thus de Koonings un-mooring after his great masterpiece “Excavation” and the early “Woman” series.  Arshille Gorky,  de Kooning’s mentor, was completely obsessed with Cezanne to the point of mimicking his imagery in a very accurate manner.  Gorky’s obsession with Cezanne turned out to be an excellent launching pad into an original vision.  Gorky could instinctively avoid the dragon’s lair of Picasso.

Excellence vs Banality

In creative endeavors like architecture and painting one is continually at risk of perpetuating the banal.  Banality is disappointing and avoiding it is getting more difficult.  Perhaps this is a function of getting older (everyone is a poet at twenty).  All of the usual excuses for not delivering excellence are so reasonable and understandable to all.  Excellence is unreasonable.  It is an aberration.  It is freakish.  It is hiding all around us.  It is in small places.  It is crouching in corners and scurrying into myriad cracks in our rude and hectic culture.  There are many imposters: shiny stuff, new slick things and fast things as well as things with mighty advertising budgets.  Excellence is usually quiet and it must be captured by stealth.  Excellence is a very sharp knife.  It cuts through all of the clutter that surrounds us and it makes the agents of that clutter embarrassed.  Excellence is buoyant and radiant and fresh and fun.  Look! I ‘ve found some right here.  Hey! There’s some over there!  How do you know when you have found it?  Banality is noisy and shiny as well as dull and common.  Excellence is quieter and it engages your imagination.  It makes you happy.

Bliss and Fear in Art

Bliss may be small in its manifestation and large in its effect.  If one examines the drawings of the masters, one sees a quality of line that radiates the presence of bliss.  This line quality is that of assurance, grace, truth and so -  beauty.  Without this quality of bliss there is no mastery.  A knowing eye can see, smell, feel  fear in the drawn line.  Fear is the absence of bliss.  Fear is the black hole to the radiant star of bliss.  There are  times when fear in art is compelling and it may be a driving force for remarkable and popular art  but it is not a factor  in the poetics of mastery.   In mastery all fear has been translated into bliss.   If a draughtsman misses the bliss, he must proceed to his bag of tricks to deliver a work worthy of  sharing.  If you miss the bliss in oil paint, then toil on the canvas may suffice.  If you miss it in watercolor  try again another day.  A painting produced in a state of  bliss allows room in its being for the full participation of an enlightened viewer.  There are blank places, rest stops, easy places to enter the work, to share the joy.  Paint speaks:  “join me on a journey to a magic place, a stunning place, a vital, vibrant  and powerful place.”  Matisse invites you in, Turner invites you into his storms,  Chardin invites you into his kitchens and dining rooms.  Jasper Johns and Eric Fischl invite.   Inferior art tries to seduce  with  vague or arcane concepts, hyperglycemic colors, crowded composition, over-worked technique – work that transmits of a fear of not pleasing an audience.  Inferior painting reeks of the fear of failure.  It is blah.  Bliss allows you entry and takes you on a journey of delight.  You share the bliss of the creator - the artist.  Fear art is  a one-trick pony, a one-note Johnny, a one night stand.  It is worth a one minute perusal in a museum and can  inspire reams of text.  It is often over-sized.  Inflated scale is the first trick of bliss gone south.  The second trick is polish and shine.  Knowing that the human touch will reveal you - erase the mark altogether,  thus our Warhol induced, celebration of the machine-made object.  See Murikami, Koons, Hirst: active masters of the assembly line.  Although the bliss of the act of creation may be missing from this work, it is nonetheless conceptually rich and  fun to look at.   Russell Chatham’s postage stamp size watercolors carry more bliss-freight per square inch than even Turner’s late vapor.  Blissful art attracts,  blah art explodes in your eyes then bores you forever after, see Caravaggio.

War and Art

The epochal (500 year) paradigm shift of 1912 which affected all art,  science and politics was deeply affected by black emancipation penetrating the lapsed Enlightenment project in Europe i.e. the U.S. Civil War, six hundred thousand white men and thousands of black men die in order to acknowledge a non-white culture as citizens rather than property.  This potent event revitalized art and science that had been exhausted by the urban nightmare of nineteenth and early twentieth century labor abuse.  How to explain the fifty year delay?  It can take Europeans at least one generation to absorb the astounding drama and forcefulness of the reifications of the American character.  Declaration of Independence 1776 - French Revolution 1789.   Picasso celebrates Lincoln in “Le Demoiselles d’Avignon”

Matisse - Once Again

Henri Matisse is underestimated by almost everyone and commonly viewed as Picasso’s inferior when discussing paradigm shifting innovations in painting during the early years of the twentieth century.  This is a shame and it is not at all accurate.  This misconstrue comes from Gertrude Stein who bore a grudge toward Matisse for remaining socially, emotionally aloof from her and her cozy circle.  One can easily assert that Matisse fully grasped and experimented with the paradigm-destroying features of Cezanne’s late work: non- mimetic drawing, flattened, democratized picture plane, creating form with color, unpinned station point, simultaneity, warped linear perspective etc.  Matisse’s bold experiments with simultaneity occurred from 1901 through 1920 before his languid odalisques but for the first seven years of the century Matisse was bravely taking most of the arrows for the modern movement while Picasso was dallying in his lachrymose pastiche of Puvis de Chavannes (blue and Rose periods) waiting for the smoke to clear, waiting for the Indians to leave the building.  Once the rabid fervor over modern painting calmed down to a mild, gut-churning roar, Picasso along with his wife Braque make their appearance with their cogent abstraction of all things late Cezanne - Cubism and carry all of the glory of bold, earth-shattering innovation to the army of young painters, sculptors and architects in Paris in 1910.  Cubism is a shorthand for seven years of Matisse’s experiments with Cezanne’s innovations with some tribal motifs added for dramatic effectIt was Picasso’s bande that included the greatest writers  of the time, avante- garde pitchmen,  Apollinaire, Max Jacob, Cocteau (later) who launched the myth that Picasso was the heavy lifter for twentieth century artistic innovation.  This along with Henri Matisse’s self-immolating remark about wanting to make “pictures for a tired working man to enjoy while stretched out on his sofa” - a remark made after ten years of fierce battle - who wouldn’t want to rest up a bit.  Picasso had a p.r. machine to expand the perception of his particular contributions and Matisse did not.  The situation is similar to the settlement of the New England Western Addition (present day Ohio) during the early nineteenth century.  The men who fought Indians, cut trees, surveyed the land, platted new townships i.e. those who did the brutal heavy, dangerous work went bankrupt allowing the following generation of speculators to make a killing.  Matisse is the true pioneer of modern painting and Picasso is clearly a latecomer although a potent and important one.  Abe Lincoln was a latecomer to Indiana but an effective member of the community.  Cubism was simply easier to grasp, more transferable than the early oeuvre of Matisse and the Fauves.  The foot soldiers of the Parisian avante- garde could traipse through Picasso’s studio and see all they needed in order to grasp Cezanne.  Picasso and Braque’s Cubism is Cezanne in a pill.

Hard Edge Defense

The hard edge in late twentieth century painting was the circling of the wagons of the marginally gifted against the born warriors - those with abundant natural talent whom they massacred for the most part though a few escaped:  Oldenburg, Rivers, Dine, Johns, LeBrun, Liashkov, Praczukowski.

Episode and Illusion

All painting is episodic, illusory, narrative:  Pollock, Rothko, deKooning, Newman and Kline were illustrating/ narrating Clement Greenberg and Harold Rosenberg’s theories.  These painters were as much illustrators as Norman Rockwell or Bernie Fuchs simply for a narrower audience.

Babies and Bathwater

Painters of the Renaissance paradigm (1412-1900)  fought the same battles in all of their work.  These battles were for: 1.  The center of focus 2.  For pictorial space  3.  For story line - the narrative.   Modern art, in its swerve,  has eliminated the center, flattened pictorial space and removed the story.  Has some part of the baby been thrown out with this bathwater?  Contemporary critics, teachers and curators  clobber this infant each time it crawls back onto the scene - cruel.  Time to lighten up.  Architecture entertained its turning of the soil of modernist dogma in 1966 with Robert Venturi’s  explosive treatise, Complexity and Contradiction in Architecture.  The art world still revolves around Duchamp, now a moldy old worn out set of notions that were tired when Andy Warhol took them for a spin around the block to great effect.

Not Enough There There

It can be said of much art that there is just not enough right with it.  Perhaps it is finished but almost always stunted in conception and execution.  A painting has the potential to be explosively powerful in its expressive range and in its sublimity entirely independent of the subject matter.  See “Rain, Steam and Speed” by Turner or “Girl with a Shuttlecock” by Chardin.  The subject matter in these two paintings is incidental to the highly resolved power emanating from the color harmony and composition both tuned to a fever pitch.  Whereas Leon Golub or Robert Longo can paint men being tortured or falling through the sky, this work still elicits a muted esthetic/emotional response.  These paintings lack resolution.  There is not quite enough there there.

Gertrude Stein re-writes History

Gertrude Stein is guilty of casting damaging aspersions upon two immensely worthy subjects,  neither deserving her snarky opprobrium.  “Oakland, California - there is no there there”  Oakland is one of the most beautiful cities in the world and if not for ever-so-precious San Francisco, it would be the jewel of the Bay and of the whole west coast.  Stein’s denigration of Matisse comparing him unfavorably to her little lap dog Picasso and  her intentional mis-reading and mis-telling Matisse’s remark that he simply "wished to paint pictures that might add a little comfort to a bourgeois life".  Picasso rode into his exalted place in the art world on the coattails of firebrand Matisse who had been the stalking horse of modern painting while Picasso was painting murals in smoky cafes in Barcelona.  Matisse constructed an intellectual environment in the Paris art world that enabled Picasso and his bande to pursue their bold explorations.  If not for the new territory opened by Matisse Picasso would have remained a stylistic magpie.

Avante-Garde Institutionalized

It is strange to attempt to institutionalize the avante- garde in university studio art programs knowing that a feature of any avante garde is the loss of the great majority of its members to random exploration that, however valiant, intelligent and well-meaning, leads to penury, mental illness and suicide (see La Boheme).  An institutionalized avante garde is a gross contradiction of terms.  Our university art programs create yet another cluster of anemic, static and claustrophobic academic artworks as lifeless as those that launched the Impressionist/ Fauvist /Cubist revolution against the nineteenth century French academy. All cultures require an avante- garde for the new ideas that will save it from itself.  It is counter-productive of the vital societal raison d' etre  of the avante- garde to homogenize its purpose, program and agenda in a university art department.  Academic art is all heading in the same direction.  The jargon has become uniform.  Language directs the exploration.  The current shared dogma celebrates non-narrative, non object oriented, conceptual, gender inspired work that is pale, wan and always doctrinaire.  Duchamp wrote out the marching orders in 1920 and so it is.  This art is no fun to look at.  It is no fun to think about.  It all smacks of faux enlightened laziness of mind and muscle.  It is as empty as the soupiest, graviest nineteenth century Beaux arts historical narrative extravaganza.  The art of today is produced hermetically at a computer or in a studio or factory as separated from nature as the precious polishers of the past.

Cezanne Calculus

The generation of young artists in Paris from 1900 to World War One looked at Cezanne’s late painting as if it were nature itself, thus the work of the Fauves, Cubists, Futurists, Purists et al was already a meta-art, an art about art rather than art about nature or even historical ideas or mythological motifs. From Matisse onward through the twentieth century painting is about other painting.  In mathematical terms, Cezanne’s late work is the first derivative of nature and Cubism is the second derivative of nature.

Artist v. Painter

The terms artist and painter are not synonymous.  The word artist implies innovation, exploration and a conscious effort to extend the boundary of art.  Paul Cezanne was the last painter who was also an artist  who used nature as a direct source of inspiration.  From the Fauvists:  Matisse, Derain and Vlaminck,  who directly followed late Cezanne   during the first decade of the twentieth century to the present, all painting as art ie painting in the lead in defining what art is in its time, has looked only at other painting or into the psyche for inspiration not out into the landscape.  Very little painting of the past seventy five years can even be considered art  i.e.  extending the range of the avante garde.  Jackson Pollock, Andy Warhol and Richard Prince perhaps - no one else.  Now that painting has reached a dead end (see celebrations of  the paintings of Damien Hirst, Jeff Koons, John Currin, Robert Mangold, Frank Stella and countless others, all others) perhaps it is time to direct observation and interpretation of nature for a painting that aspires to the status of art.  It is time to return to the source.  The oeuvre has been exhausted.