Barry Schwabsky – ARTnews.com https://www.artnews.com The Leading Source for Art News & Art Event Coverage Thu, 21 Dec 2023 15:18:28 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.3.2 https://www.artnews.com/wp-content/themes/vip/pmc-artnews-2019/assets/app/icons/favicon.png Barry Schwabsky – ARTnews.com https://www.artnews.com 32 32 Pussy Riot Retrospective Proves Why the Group’s Activism Should Be in an Art Museum https://www.artnews.com/art-in-america/aia-reviews/pussy-riot-retrospective-1234690460/ Thu, 21 Dec 2023 15:05:45 +0000 https://www.artnews.com/?p=1234690460 Pussy Riot is generally referred to as a punk rock band and performance art ensemble. But at least as it appears in Montreal, the group’s first museum survey does not disclose much in the way of musicality or visual sophistication—except in its brilliantly cacophonous exhibition design. Anyway, such qualities might be beside the point.

A sort of retrospective in the form of a colorful multimedia show that originated at Kling & Bang in Reykjavik before traveling to the Louisiana Museum of Art, followed by overlapping iterations in Montreal and at the Haus der Kunst in Munich and the Polygon Gallery in Vancouver, “Velvet Terrorism” doesn’t put much stock in subtlety or nuance either. More in the group’s style is a video installed near the exhibition’s entrance, showing a ski-masked Pussy Riot member pissing on a portrait of the Russian president; if that doesn’t make things clear enough, the title of one of the group’s early actions, Fuck You, Fucking Sexists and Fucking Putinists (2011), involved “musical occupations of glamorous venues in the capital” including “areas where wealthy Putinists gather: in Moscow boutiques, at fashion shows, in elite cars, and on the rooftops of Kremlin-affiliated bars.”

Whether or not you’re prepared to enjoy Pussy Riot’s songs as music or their actions and videos as art, though, you’d be hard put to contest their right to the third category into which their work has always been slotted: activism. And yet, after immersing myself in “Velvet Terrorism,” I had to wonder whether even that is quite the right description of what they do. Activism, as I understand it, is not action for its own sake, but is undertaken to achieve some determinate social or political goal, to change the world, or at least one’s country or community.

Masked figures dancing in an ornate church.
Pussy Riot: Punk Prayer, 2012.

Is that what Pussy Riot have been up to? Note that the catalog descriptions of their actions are organized into three rubrics: Location, Context, and Reaction—and that the most common entry under Reaction is “nothing serious happened.” But when something serious does happen, it has to do with legal penalties: “Everyone was detained 3 times. Beatings, harassments, surveillance, slashed tires” or “Detention, day in police station.” And note that the actions include ones imposed on the group’s members, rather than organized by them: “140 Hours of Community Service 2018-19,” “Pyotr’s Poisoning 2018,” and so on.

As MAC director John Zeppetelli writes, Pussy Riot has “used the police state’s apparatus of repression and authoritarianism as a creative partner, engaging in an uneasy ‘dance with the devil.’” This is risky stuff. Prison time adds up, not to mention fines and extrajudicial violence. It takes incredible courage to keep exposing oneself to the wrath of a brutal regime without conscience. But while Pussy Riot’s interventions may be, as the catalog says, “desperate, sudden and joyous,” that joy seems very far away from hope. Does Pussy Riot really imagine that they can change Russia? Or even just change some minds? It doesn’t look that way. These sisters are doing it for themselves: trolling the government, the church, the oligarchs, and so on is its own reward.

A wall drawing of a figure saying "burn this shit" while holding a flame to a shape labeled "Russian propaganda."
Exhibition view of “Velvet Terrorism: Pussy Riot’s Russia” presented at Musée d’art contemporain de Montréal (MAC).

Is it worth the beatings, imprisonment, and exile just to get under the skin of Russia’s rulers? The answer appears to be yes. It turns out to be a way of keeping the spirit free. And that’s why Pussy Riot’s work really does belong in an art museum. It is not performance art as activism; it is, rather, something like the performance of activism in a situation where true activist intervention has been rendered impossible. For the group’s members to have persisted in their efforts over more than a decade despite their having no realistic prospect of making a measurable impact on the reality of Russia in itself constitutes a vivid emblem of the unquenchable desire for change even in the absence of any means to satisfy such a desire. That’s the artistic core of Pussy Riot’s work. They make rebelliousness an aesthetic quality in itself—one that can move us, and that is serious in its implications.

How will this rebelliousness manifest itself now that many of Pussy Riot’s members are living outside Russia? Will they rebel against their new hosts? I hope so. One action documented here is the hanging of a banner at Trump Tower in New York in 2017 in support of Oleg Sentsov, a Ukrainian film director who was arrested in Crimea when Russia invaded that territory in 2014. It caused a stir, but, of course, Pussy Riot’s pro-Ukrainian anti-Putin stance is music to the ears of most of us in the West. It’s consumable at no risk. Rebelliousness is hard to maintain as it devolves into entertainment. Perhaps this problem was already inherent in Pussy Riot’s strategy of divertingly high-spirited confrontation. In a way, it mirrored too well the topsy-turvy image-world of Putin’s Russia, which maintains itself through the mere performance of law, of elections, and even (in its propaganda against Ukraine) of antifascism. Now the task should be to cultivate more deeply the inner freedom without which Pussy Riot’s opposition to Putin could not have happened, and which may be even more desperately needed in a West that is increasingly listing toward its own forms of authoritarianism.

]]>
Brice Marden Was a Painter of Rare Power https://www.artnews.com/art-in-america/features/brice-marden-appreciation-1234687567/ Wed, 22 Nov 2023 18:12:08 +0000 https://www.artnews.com/?p=1234687567 It seemed as though Brice Marden had always been there and always would be. That was an illusion, of course, but a comforting one. His first show, at the Bykert Gallery in 1966 when he was just 28, is one of those legendary debuts that shook the art world (then defined as about 100 New Yorkers)—like that of Jasper Johns at the Leo Castelli Gallery in 1958, or Frank Stella’s at the same venue two years later. Have gallery shows since then ever seemed to take on such historical importance?

But that was all before my time. For me, the great moment was 1987, with Marden’s first show at what was then called the Mary Boone/Michael Werner Gallery, when we saw that Marden had fearlessly taken his work apart and put it back together, differently. The subtly hued and densely textured monochromatic panels of the previous two decades had shed their skin, as it were, to show their gestural bones and sinews. Like Philip Guston forsaking abstraction for images, but within the realm of abstraction, Marden had chosen renewal over repetition.

There are a couple of experiences that come to mind when I think of Marden. One took place in 2000, when I was visiting London. A friend had organized a show of Marden’s work at the Serpentine Gallery and invited me for a walkthrough with the artist and some students ahead of the opening. 

I don’t remember exactly what Marden said, but I remember vividly his physical comportment as he spoke in front of his paintings, a certain way of pointing toward things that came not from the shoulder or the wrist but from the elbow, with the upper arm down, close to the torso, and the forearm moving freely. I thought back to pictures I’d seen of Marden in his studio and realized that this must be something like the way he used his arm in painting.

That seemed like a notable observation, but hardly a surprising one—the same motor neurons being involved in pointing and painting, probably. The surprise came later, when I attended the exhibition’s opening. As I strolled around trying to get another glimpse of the paintings through the crowd, I noticed that people who’d stopped in front of this or that work to discuss it—people who had not been present at the walkthrough to see Marden as he spoke—were using gestures very similar to the artist’s own. That was the revelation: that this art could induct its viewers not just into the painter’s way of seeing but into his way of physically inhabiting the world. It was the most concrete possible demonstration of what I already knew intellectually: that Marden’s was an art of rare power.

My other Marden anecdote dates a full decade before that. I was in Pittsburgh for the opening of the Carnegie International. Some of us invited visitors were offered a bus tour of the area, including a visit to Fallingwater, the amazing Frank Lloyd Wright house about 70 miles out of town. As we were wandering through the place, I stopped to check out a painting on the wall. The style, probably from the 1950s, was unfamiliar, and there was no signature visible. Who do you think the artist is, I wondered out loud to whomever happened to be nearby. Standing next to me was Marden, who immediately answered with the name of an artist I did not know. I don’t remember what else he said, or even what the name was, but I do remember his reply when I expressed my wonder at the fact that he could instantly recognize such an obscure artist. He brushed it off. “Painters know painters,” he said.

Those two stories sum up two facets of Marden’s art that were rarely so harmoniously integrated as in his work. There’s the immersion in tradition, the urge to know all that had been done in the thousands of years that human beings had been painting; in this sense, Marden was totally inside painting the way an angel is inside paradise (or a devil, as John Milton knew, is inside hell). This is the aspect of Marden’s work that has always made it enjoyable to see his exhibitions in the company of painters, when one can learn from their amazement at what they’re seeing and how it was done that would never occur to a non-practitioner. But then, as my experience in London showed, Marden’s paintings are extraordinarily generous in their way of quietly inviting viewers of all sorts into this inner world of the painter painting. He managed to make each of us a little bit more an artist. 

This article appears in the Winter 2023 issue, p. 36.

]]>
“Manet/Degas” Displays A Standoff Between Two Pinnacles of Painting https://www.artnews.com/art-in-america/aia-reviews/met-manet-degas-1234681368/ Fri, 06 Oct 2023 16:20:52 +0000 https://www.artnews.com/?p=1234681368 “Manet/Degas” features work by two of the pinnacles of 19th-century painting, which is to say, two of the pinnacles of painting. You can’t go wrong with a subject like that, and the Met hasn’t: it’s a crowd-pleaser that’s also genuinely illuminating. It’s surprising, then, that the museum can boast that this is the “first major exhibition” considering the mutually fascinated duo.

To translate the pairing into 20th-century terms, it’s not like Pablo Picasso and Georges Braque, who were the subject of a great MoMA exhibition back in 1989. Édouard Manet and Edgar Degas were never in any sense collaborators “roped together like mountain climbers,” as Braque recalled of the Cubist era. They were comparable, rather, to Picasso and Henri Matisse: rivals who could hardly take their wary yet admiring eyes off each other.

Manet and Degas are inseparable from the great historical phenomenon we call Impressionism, yet both are somehow tangential to it. Manet was considered the movement’s progenitor, yet he never took part in its exhibitions, preferring to take his stand in the official French Salons—“the real field of battle,” he believed—no matter if his works were, like most Impressionists’, sometimes rejected. Degas, by contrast, ceased submitting his work to the Salons and enthusiastically took part in the renegade Impressionist shows. Moreover, if by “Impressionism” one means the plein-air landscapes of Claude Monet, Camille Pissarro, and Alfred Sisley, as one often does, then the label is evidently ill-suited to Manet and Degas. Both of them, in the spirit of their elders like Gustave Courbet, the prophet of Realism, and Honoré Daumier, who turned social commentary into high art, were painters of modern urban life.

An Impressionistic painting of people on a beach wearing 19th century clothes. A little girl is lying on the ground under an umbrella as a woman combs her hair.
Edgar Degas: Beach Scene, ca. 1869–70.
An impressionistic painting of a sandy beach with a turqoise sea. A dozen or so figures in old timey clothes are holding umbrellas.
Édouard Manet: On the Beach, Boulogne-sur-Mer, 1868.

And we don’t often think of Manet and Degas as a pair. One reason is that, while they were born only two years apart—Manet in 1832, Degas in 1834—Degas lived much longer: Manet was just 51 when he died, Degas lived to the age of 83. And then there’s politics: Manet a man of the left, Degas a conservative who, at the time of the 1894 Dreyfus affair, was revealed to be a repulsive anti-Semite. Moreover, Manet flourished early, artistically: He painted many of his best-known works in his thirties—Olympia and Le déjeuner sur l’herbe both date from 1863, for example—whereas Degas really hit his stride a little later, I’d say around 1870.

Maybe that’s why Manet can seem further away from us. The snapshot-like compositions of some of Degas’s paintings and pastels, not to mention the proto-readymade gesture of clothing the bronze Little Dancer with a real skirt and hair ribbon, connect directly with the modernism of the 20th century, while Manet remains a man of the mid-19th. The painter-critic Jacques-Émile Blanche would write in 1924 that “Degas’ speculative and inductive intellect is much closer than that of Manet to the ideal of those painters to whose futures we look confidently.”

By the same token, however, Manet’s reputation is indisputably that of the innovator who sparked the whole course of modern art: Pierre Bourdieu was not the only one to have called him a revolutionary, whereas Degas was a modernist despite his own resistance to it. He insisted on the fundamental significance of drawing while his Impressionist colleagues reserved that role for color.

Co-curated by Stephan Wolohojian and Ashley Dunn in collaboration with Laurence des Cars, Isolde Pludermacher, and Stéphane Guégan, and previously shown at the Musée d’Orsay in Paris, the exhibition is a compare/contrast exercise effectively focusing its attention on the two artists’ approaches to related themes and subject matter: portraiture, seascapes, horse racing, the women of Paris, and so on. We witness too their shared apprenticeship to the old masters on view in the Louvre, and learn of their ambiguous fascination with the Salon on the one hand and their Impressionist colleagues on the other, as well as their responses to the American Civil War and other conflicts.

And yet what emerges most vividly from the exhibition is what the curators leave essentially tacit: the fundamental difference in style, or rather, in the feeling for paint itself, between the two artists. Manet, it seems, was entranced by the physicality of paint, its tactility and manipulability, which he never hesitated to showcase. For this reason, he never tried to cultivate the impeccable (and therefore invisible) finish that was so beloved by the artistic establishment with which he never ceased to contend.

By contrast, Degas, a draftsman through and through, appreciated paint for its fluidity—its blurrings and blendings and suffusions (no wonder he was the master of pastel!), tending toward a kind of atmospheric quality—more than as palpable matière. And yet, paradoxically, what Degas depicted with that almost bodiless flow of color retained its volumetric solidity, where the implacable presence of Manet’s tangible brush marks seems to aspire to the flatness of what would later become mainstream modernism.

Although the critics of his day attacked Manet for painting mere morceaux—bits and pieces—one realizes from the comparison with Degas that he was, on the contrary, an aspirant (usually successful) to the masterpiece. Think of such touchstone works as, most notably, Le déjeuner sur l’herbe (here, a full-scale sketch from the Courtauld Gallery, London, stands in for the finished painting), Olympia (on display for the first time in the United States), The Execution of Maximilian (we see the version, on loan from the National Gallery, London, that Manet’s family cut into pieces after the artist’s death, that were that were later reassembled by Degas, and are now owned by the National Gallery), and A Bar at the Folies-Bergère (not in this exhibition). None of Degas’s works is an isolated cynosure in that way. He was, albeit very differently from Monet, a painter of series rather than of unique statement pieces.

I don’t mean to assert Manet’s superiority. Gun to my head, I’d even admit a preference for Degas, thanks to his emphasis on the transitory over monumentality. But the exhibition’s melancholy last room, devoted to Degas’s collection of art by his departed friend and rival, suggests a kind of haunting, as if there were something in Manet’s art that Degas could neither internalize nor reject. As for Manet, none of his contemporaries ever stirred that kind of fascination in him. Velázquez may have been the only rival he recognized.

]]>
Francoise Gilot Was More Than Picasso’s Muse—She Lived Life on Her Own Terms https://www.artnews.com/art-in-america/features/francoise-gilot-appreciation-1234677324/ Fri, 18 Aug 2023 19:05:30 +0000 https://www.artnews.com/?p=1234677324 Walking out on Picasso, as Françoise Gilot did in 1953, could not eliminate his impact on her own art and life. The ambiguity is right there in the final lines of what remains her most notable creation, the best-selling 1964 book Life with Picasso, coauthored with Carlton Lake: when she left Picasso, “he burned all the bridges that connected me to the past I had shared with him. But in doing so he forced me to discover myself and thus to survive. I shall never cease being grateful to him for that.”

It’s a peculiar statement that accords her rejected lover the motivating agency in her own self-discovery. And it’s unsupported by any careful reading of the rest of the book, which paints a clear-eyed picture of the world’s most renowned artist at the height of his fame, but also a vivid self-portrait of an inexperienced young woman from a privileged background—she was just 21 when she met the Spanish painter, who was 40 years her elder—who nonetheless had the sharpness of perception and toughness of spirit to enter an inherently unequal relationship without sacrificing her identity to it. I suspect that Gilot’s survival instinct was just as inherent as her sense of self. And survive she did: when she died this past June, she was 101.

Early on, Gilot experimented with abstraction but then seems to have accepted Picasso’s dismissal of abstract painting as merely a “kind of invertebrate, unformulated interior dream.” In any case, her paintings up through the 1960s are primarily representational—and, as with many French painters of her generation, they show the strong imprint of Picasso’s influence.

Later she began to alternate between imagistic and nonobjective modes, though she always attributed autobiographical content to her abstract works. In writing about her 1979–80 composition The Hawthorne, Garden of Another Time, a luminous arrangement of flat, clearly demarcated color forms, she described it as embodying “the recollection of looking toward my paternal grandmother’s garden in Neuilly”—the affluent Paris suburb where she was born in 1921—“through the red stained-glass windows of the billiard room on the second floor.” Distilling her memories and perceptions into abstract form, she often secreted fragments of imagery within her works, blurring the distinction. Still, it can be argued that it was in her efforts toward abstraction that Gilot achieved her true independence as an artist. There, she was free to use color, as she said, “to exaggerate, to go beyond, to pursue the extreme limit of what is suggested by the pictorial imagination.”

She also achieved double-barreled success, as both a painter and a writer: Though academic attention to her career has been scarce, her exhibitions were legion, and in 2021 a couple of her paintings sold for $1.3 million each through Sotheby’s and Christie’s. Her book Life with Picasso sold millions of copies worldwide and was succeeded by Matisse and Picasso: A Friendship in Art (1990) and the autobiographical Interface: The Painter and the Mask (1983).

In 1970 she married Jonas Salk, the American inventor of the polio vaccine, and began living for part of each year in La Jolla, California; she taught each summer between 1976 and 1983 at the University of Southern California. Following Salk’s death in 1995, she left California for the Upper West Side of New York.

A white woman in a cardigan sweater by some easels.
Françoise Gilot.

Having learned from Picasso what she could, Gilot went her own way with equanimity, and without apparent bitterness. How many of us could do the same? The Guardian recently published a takedown of the “blatant sexism” of the obituary headlines for Gilot, which never failed to mention Picasso (e.g., the New York Times: “Françoise Gilot, Artist in the Shadow of Picasso, Is Dead at 101”). Guardian writer Katy Hessel asks, “does his name really have to be mentioned? Aren’t her career, her achievements, her name, enough to stand on their own?”

One retort would be that Gilot herself never believed that she had to sever her name from that of her former lover. Aside from writing two books about him, she was happy to exhibit her own work at the Musée Picasso in Antibes in 1987, and then in 2012 to cocurate a his-and-hers show of their work at Gagosian gallery in New York. So the answer is: yes, you do need to mention Picasso to understand Gilot, and that was something she was never ashamed of. Just don’t call her his “muse,” as did the Washington Post, among others. From the beginning, Gilot met Picasso as a fellow practitioner and not just the object of his adoring gaze.

It’s notable that the Brooklyn Museum’s exhibition “It’s Pablo-matic: Picasso According to Hannah Gadsby,” while claiming to present a feminist riposte to the artist’s well-known misogyny, has no room for the works of either of the women artists who knew him best, Gilot and Dora Maar. The show’s organizers might have discovered that Gilot knew better than most how to get over his arrogant brutality without neglecting everything in his work that’s so useful to other artists.  

]]>
Somaya Critchlow’s Provocative Portraits of Nude Black Women Test Perceptions of Female Sexuality https://www.artnews.com/art-in-america/features/somaya-critchlow-provocative-portraits-nude-black-women-test-perceptions-female-sexuality-1234675250/ Thu, 27 Jul 2023 14:00:00 +0000 https://www.artnews.com/?p=1234675250 When I spoke to Somaya Critchlow in February, she had just moved into a new studio in South London facing the Thames. No paintings to see there yet; for now, she tells me, she’s just drawing as she enjoys the light coming in off the river. The not-yet-30-year-old painter had recently finished the work for her largest American show yet, which opened at the Flag Art Foundation in New York in April, comprising new paintings alongside a selection of highlights from her still-brief but already noteworthy career.

Speaking on Zoom, I asked Critchlow how she feels about being part of the new wave of figurative painting that’s swept the art world over the last few years, and her response was telling: She doesn’t deny that her work is figurative—how could she?—but she says her deep interest is not there so much as in the materials and techniques of painting. Can she really be such a formalist, or is she being evasive? After all, her fantasy portraits of young, bare-breasted Black women are not exactly neutral subjects: imagine something like a collaboration between Lynette Yiadom-Boakye and Lisa Yuskavage, but at a Giorgio Morandi scale. Drawn, in a far from literal way, from sources ranging from classical European painting and her own ongoing practice of life drawing to 1960s soft porn and contemporary music videos, and not-so-contemporary ones, too, like PJ Harvey’s “C’mon Billy” (1995), Critchlow’s works seem calculated to elicit strong reactions. They test viewers’ visceral feelings about female sexuality, Blackness, and what happens when they intersect. Things can get uneasy. She once told an interviewer that “with femininity you can’t get it right.” Her work reflects an equanimity with that conundrum.

pink-hued painting of a nude dark-skinned woman kneeling on the floor with a paintbrush
Somaya Critchlow: X Studies the work of Pythagoras , 2022.

For what it’s worth, I’m willing to believe the smiling, ingenuous-looking young woman I see on the screen really is unconcerned about how others might react to her provocative images. She’s so clearly absorbed in her own self-exploration by way of the language of painting—not formalism, but form as a metaphor for the self. The critic Johanna Fateman once put it beautifully: Critchlow’s figures, she said, “seem to fix their dispassionate gazes beyond the sexualized tropes that frame them.” The results are often poignant, sometimes ironic, always honest in their willingness to go where the inherent and undemonstrative sensuality of her paint seems to lead.

The paintings exude an unmistakable intimacy. That’s partly to do with the modest size of most of her works: When she mentioned she’d done some bigger paintings for the New York show, I asked how large, curious about what sounded like a significant shift in the work, and she admitted, “well, medium-scale.” The intimacy owes perhaps as well to her muted palette, dominated by the myriad browns she uses to describe, not only her characters’ flesh, but much of their surroundings; above all, it derives from the delicacy of touch that she brings to the canvas. And although there is a surprising strain of traditionalism in her approach to painting, perhaps a reflection of her postgraduate training at London’s Royal Drawing School, she is no more constrained by any sort of academicism than she is tempted by the overt sociopolitical messaging that engages many of the other figurative painters in the spotlight today. Her art is finding out who she is and what she can do through painting.

]]>
Painter Leon Polk Smith Turned to Abstraction to Explore Notions of Identity and Race https://www.artnews.com/art-in-america/features/leon-polk-smith-abstraction-explore-identity-race-1234674406/ Mon, 17 Jul 2023 18:41:00 +0000 https://www.artnews.com/?p=1234674406 Leon Polk Smith’s position in postwar art has always been ambiguous. One reason may be the myth that New York in the 1950s had no room for anything but Abstract Expressionism; as a contemporary of Willem de Kooning and Mark Rothko, his work could seem an anomaly on the postwar American art scene. Smith, who died in 1996 and is currently the subject of a retrospective at Haus Konstruktiv in Zurich, seems ripe for reconsideration. While he has always been filed under the rubric of hard-edge abstraction, he blazed an independent path in pursuit of an abstract art responsive to the tensions and forces in and beyond form. His abstraction has a subject, based on his own life experience, and it has something to tell us about a theme that has become more topical in our time: identity.

As a man of mixed race, Smith must have felt something of an outsider in the New York art world. He was born in what was Indian Territory in 1906, the year before it was admitted to the union as Oklahoma, the 46th state. His parents, both partly of Cherokee extraction, had moved there from Tennessee; the people among whom he grew up were predominantly Choctaw and Chickasaw, members (like Smith’s Cherokee ancestors) of the “Five Civilized Tribes” that had been forcibly removed from the Southeast in the 1830s. After graduating from high school, he worked as a rancher, among other jobs, before heading to Oklahoma’s East Central State Normal School (now East Central University) in 1931 for a degree in English, and it was there, in his final year, that—having never set foot in a museum, met an artist, or seen a serious work of painting—he took an art class and experienced it as a revelation: “I felt very strongly … that I had always been an artist,” he said in a 1985 interview.

Upon graduation, Smith commenced his career as a schoolteacher in his home state, but began attending summer sessions at Teachers College, Columbia University. In New York, at the Albert E. Gallatin Gallery of Living Art at New York University, Smith experienced a further revelation: the existence of abstract art. Henceforth, his heroes would be Jean Arp, Constantin Brancusi, and, above all, Piet Mondrian.

Not that Smith’s work turned completely nonobjective right away. The paintings in his first one-person exhibition, at New York’s Uptown Gallery in 1941—he had moved to the city two years earlier—retained referential imagery, albeit in a geometricizing, reductive key. An unsigned review in Art Digest describes “a highly personalized idiom” in works that “picture farm life, comment on our war-mad world, and depict the biological cycle of life” along with “semiabstractions executed in bright watercolor washed with accents of ink line, alternatively sharp and blotter fuzzy.”

Leon Polk Smith: OK Territory, 1943.

By 1943, though, when Smith painted works such as OK Territory (now in the collection of the Brooklyn Museum), he had clearly made a commitment to the heritage of Mondrian and De Stijl, employing only flat, rectilinear forms and a very limited palette. While, at least according to its title, that painting was a homage to the artist’s birthplace, many more of his paintings of the 1940s, not unlike Mondrian’s Broadway Boogie Woogie (1943), pay tribute to his adopted city through their brisk, jazzy abstract rhythms. Smith’s encapsulation of Mondrian’s lesson remains key to his own art: “the interchangeability of form and space.”

It was really only in the early 1950s that he declared his independence from Mondrian, adopting the circle rather than the rectangle as the basis for his compositions—sometimes in counterpoint to rectilinear forms, as in Chickasaw (1954), but often entrusting his art entirely to curvilinear ones, in works like Blue Red Spheres (1955). Smith retold the origin story behind this change often; like most such stories, its accuracy may be less to the point than its symbolic value. It has to do with the most ordinary thing, a catalogue of athletic equipment that caught the artist’s eye: balls! The illustrations, Smith explained to an interviewer in 1987, “were drawn with a pencil, rather than photographic illustrations. And the seams on a—let us say football or basketball—intrigued me. That showed me how to use the curvilinear form with an inner circle.” And to another interlocutor, in 1995: “I kept that catalogue on my desk and would go back to it every day or so. I thought, ‘What in the hell am I doing with this thing?’ When I put that question to myself, a little voice inside said, ‘Because that’s what you are looking for.’”

In the work Smith began doing after the fateful encounter with the catalogue, the division of the pictorial field became above all a sovereign act of drawing. The power of the line, as Smith discovered, is that it produces two shapes. One might call them positive and negative, as long as it’s clear that each one is positive to the other’s negative and vice versa: here is that “interchangeability of form and space” that so fascinated Smith. It would be tempting to say that from this point on, Arp and Brancusi become more relevant to Smith’s work than Mondrian, as his paintings begin to take on a strangely sculptural aspect, a sense of volume, even without giving up the flat plane of painting (except in a few reliefs made in the early 1960s). In the tondos that Smith was painting in the second half of the 1950s there is a distinct sense that one is seeing not a disc, but a single face of a sphere, and that the interchangeable forms encompass the unseen remainder.

Leon Polk Smith: , 1955.

In Smith’s more conventionally rectangular works from this period and on throughout the 1960s, this same principle of interchangeability applies. The artist himself explained it quite clearly in a 1964 interview:

“I will get up and draw this one line through the canvas which creates two forms, one on either side of the line, and while I am drawing this line, it seems that I am travelling many, many miles in space instead of just fifty inches or sixty inches whatever the canvas happens to be, but it is a great, great distance from one point to the next and around the curve, and I begin to feel the tensions develop and the forces working on either side of this line; there is a color often suggested, usually the color that I am going to use, that comes to me before the line reaches the other side of the canvas.”

Often the two color areas engaged by the complex curvilinear line of their boundary are approximately equal in extent. But the visual force of two different colors is never entirely equivalent; to balance the tensions between them is never easy. Still more of a challenge is to do so when there is an evident disproportion in area between the two forms. Yet in a work such as Over Easy (1958), the smaller black zone does not become a merely passive ground against which the larger magenta one appears as a figure; instead, both register as equally active, forming and being formed by its companion.

The apparent “formalism” of Smith’s lifelong fascination with the reciprocal relations of forms and spaces in painting is not something to be boxed away in a purely aesthetic realm sealed off from the rest of life. Consider Smith’s experience as a person who grew up between cultures—settler and Indigenous—and considered himself to belong to both, or perhaps to neither. “What place would an interracial artist have,” cultural historian Randolph Lewis asks in a 2001 essay on the artist, “in the dichotomous identity politics of the New York art world of the 1940s? An artist could be Euroamerican or could be something else, but being two things at once was difficult to sustain in the (white) public sphere.” Yet Lewis finds connections that others have overlooked in Smith’s art, both to Native arts and to the landscape of the American Southwest. These are all plausible. And as for the Southwestern landscape, Smith himself once ruminated, “that’s influenced my paintings more than any other experience that I’ve ever had.” From OK Territory on, the titles of many of his ostensibly abstract works attest to this. But more important, I think, is the way Smith’s art proposes that we experience what Lewis calls “being two things at once.” This double being is implicit in Smith’s very conception of line as entailing the simultaneous coming-into-being of distinct forms. One might almost feel that Smith was always addressing, in his own way, the famous words of W.E.B. Du Bois: “The problem of the Twentieth Century is the problem of the color line.”

A more precise description than “identity” of the subject of Smith’s abstraction may be, how to live together, but also how to live with oneself. Whether we are thinking of a single person, or of a whole society, identity is paradoxical: It depends on the coexistent nonidentity of its sources or members. What Smith’s art suggests is that equality is not measurable. In this regard, I think in particular of the painting Black-White Duet with Red (1953), a tondo in the collection of the Hirshhorn Museum and Sculpture Garden in Washington, D.C. Keeping Smith’s mixed racial heritage in mind, the painting becomes an almost comically blatant allegory about race in the United States, which has too often been imagined as, quite literally, a matter of black and white; whereas the Indigenous people who are coded as “red” are displaced to a small wedge of the picture. Yet that little patch of red occupying a very small area of the canvas is not mere background; on the contrary, it is key to the form of the whole, unbalancing the apparently stable contrariety of the black and white spaces in order to construct a new, more complex and dynamic equilibrium.

That complexity and dynamism would multiply in Smith’s subsequent work, particularly the polyptychs he began to make in the latter part of the 1960s, many of which he called “Constellations.” They ask viewers to see forms that strictly speaking are not there, forms that leap from canvas to canvas, so that the meaning of a shape as it literally asserts itself on any one panel has to coexist with its meaning as a fragment of a larger and partly unseen shape that exists only in the viewer’s imagination. In these paintings, as John Yau observed, “instead of coming together into a harmonic balance, the forms no longer fit comfortably inside each other” as, in the end, they had usually done in Smith’s single-canvas paintings. That’s to say that, just as Smith’s art kept opening itself up to greater degrees of difficulty and unsettledness without losing its cool, it asks viewers to do the same.

]]>
Illuminations https://www.artnews.com/art-in-america/features/illuminations-62921/ https://www.artnews.com/art-in-america/features/illuminations-62921/#respond Sat, 07 Jan 2012 16:48:56 +0000 https://www.artnews.com/artnews/news/illuminations-62921/ AMONG THE MOST significant artworks that have come into my life have been a chair, a trash can, a child’s dress. When I look at them as art, I tend to think of them as sculpture. Why do I (sometimes) call them that? As when I bestow the name of art on other things, it’s because of how they prompt me to think about form, appearance, meaning.

]]>

AMONG THE MOST significant artworks that have come into my life have been a chair, a trash can, a child’s dress. When I look at them as art, I tend to think of them as sculpture. Why do I (sometimes) call them that? As when I bestow the name of art on other things, it’s because of how they prompt me to think about form, appearance, meaning. Usually, when people speak about things like this in some slightly grander way than as chairs, trash cans, dresses, they call them objects of design, which of course they are—but that slightly distracts from what fascinates me about them because of the premium it rightly puts on function. There is a pleasure inherent in certain everyday objects that is certainly not in contradiction to their functionality but by the same token is not limited to the appreciation of it. There is a free and independent sense of invention and of the integrity of a thing’s making.

Besides, most such functions could be fulfilled in an infinite number of ways. If fulfilling a use in a satisfactory way were all that counted, there would be no choosing among the thousands of chairs that are sufficiently comfortable while not being offensive to the eye. As far as wastebaskets go, I made do for years with old Jiffy bags—this was extraordinarily efficient, in my view, since once filled, the entire thing could be discarded. The only downside was that they did not stand on their own but had to be propped up between my desk and the wall; but since I did have a desk and a wall this was no real problem. As for dresses, well, there could be no better proof than their overwhelming multiplicity that things don’t need to be standardized to be equally useful.

Anyway, out of all these everyday things that have taken on special esthetic status in my eyes—these noticed (rather than found) sculptures—perhaps my favorite is a certain lamp I keep in my living room. I am not original in this: this lamp is renowned in the annals of design. I’m speaking of the Toio standing lamp, designed by Achille Castiglioni for Flos in 1962, one of which I’ve lived with for the last 10 years. Admittedly, there might be a special reason why an art critic in particular would become fascinated by this object, and not only because its self-evident construction and spare, stripped-down industrial appearance align it with modernist sculpture. More importantly, it might be because in making this lamp Castiglioni, whether consciously or not, offered a surprising twist on the concept of the readymade, which was just then undergoing a rediscovery in the art world thanks to figures like Jasper Johns and Robert Rauschenberg in the United States, the Nouveaux Réalistes in France, and the adherents of Fluxus just about everywhere.

What is this Toio lamp? The best way to describe it might be to start at the top and work my way down. It starts with what lamps normally don’t show: the light source itself, in this case the headlight of a car—an ordinary, off-the-shelf object, although then again, in 1962 Italy, maybe not so ordinary as that. This type of headlight came from the United States, so it might have seemed a bit new and exotic despite its being so ordinary in a different context. Obviously this exoticism has little effect on me, since it is a kind of light that I am used to seeing. But there is another, more important aspect of de- or recontextualization at work here: the fact that something made to be used outdoors has here been inserted into the domestic interior. And this has not been done arbitrarily. The use of the automobile headlamp solves the big problem with lamps, namely that they need lampshades. In my view, this is as problematic as sculptures needing bases. It shows up a sort of inner contradiction in the very idea of the lamp: we need them both to shed light and to shield us from it. Facing the ceiling, the headlight, its lower portion silvered (normally to reflect its light forward, here upward), already shields us from any glare while reflecting light off the ceiling over a wide area. The headlight is displayed as an object for its own sake but also fulfills its function beautifully.

This recontextualization of an existing product is already a stroke of brilliance, a way of designing by not designing. But still there was the question of how to lift this headlamp above eye level. The rim that holds the headlamp is in turn attached to a slender hexagonal rod. Containing the wires are several loops reminiscent of those in a fishing pole—and in fact Castiglioni’s first prototype really was a fishing pole. So this is a sort of remade readymade. If you move the Toio, the rod sways like a young tree in the wind, as if to show its litheness in comparison with the heavy “head” of light it bears. But as it is metal, one has no fear that it will snap. It’s attached to a large clamp, lacquered red, that sits on the floor and holds the heavy transformer necessary to use ordinary house current for the headlight; this transformer is at once a counterweight stabilizing the whole construction and a quasi-decorative element in itself.

The Toio is made of existing elements—or adaptations thereof—with nothing added to beautify or stylize them, and nothing hidden. But it has incredible beauty and style. Yes, it performs the function of a lamp and does so with exemplary efficiency, but it does a lot more: It sheds light not only in the literal sense but also sheds light on the thinking that goes into making something. It values resourcefulness, the everyday genius of finding value in things rather than adding value to them. It talks to me about paradox and brio, and satisfies, most of all, Castiglioni’s declared desire “to communicate with the observer, to stimulate his power of understanding, his knowledge of the object, and to disregard formal appearances. This relationship could be described as one of mutual curiosity.” What could be a better account of what art should do? I’ll admit my Toio was fairly expensive for a lamp. But it was incredibly cheap for a sculpture.

Photo: Toio lamp. Courtesy Vitra Design Museum, Weil am Rhein, Germany.

]]>
https://www.artnews.com/art-in-america/features/illuminations-62921/feed/ 0