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- <text id=92TT0628>
- <title>
- Mar. 23, 1992: Bowwowing the Art World
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1992
- Mar. 23, 1992 Clinton vs. Tsongas
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- PHOTOGRAPHY, Page 74
- Bowwowing the Art World
- </hdr><body>
- <p>William Wegman's dog photos are funny; his paintings can be too.
- But a new show of his work raises the question, What's left when
- the laughs are over?
- </p>
- <p>By Richard Lacayo
- </p>
- <p> Whether or not the dog is man's best friend, it's been
- good to William Wegman. For many years Wegman's best friend was
- Man Ray, a soulful blue-gray Weimaraner that is by now the most
- famous artist's model since Alfred Stieglitz picked up the
- scent of Georgia O'Keeffe. In the oversize Polaroids that Wegman
- started making in the late 1970s, Man Ray can be found patiently
- enduring whatever new conceit his master would visit on him.
- Dusted in flour, tricked up as an elephant, wrapped head to toe
- in Christmas-tree garlands, he had the comic gravity of Buster
- Keaton and the acrobatic ambiguities of a four-legged pun. The
- pictures made Wegman, until then a lesser-known Conceptualist,
- the kind of artist who gets invited on Carson and Letterman.
- Four years after Man Ray died in 1982, Wegman acquired Fay Ray,
- a chocolaty female of the same breed who has been his muse and
- model ever since.
- </p>
- <p> The Wegman retrospective, which continues through April 19
- at the Whitney Museum in New York City, then moves to Houston
- on May 16, puts his famous dog pictures in the context of his
- career as an artist whose specialty has been mildly cerebral
- jokes. For the Conceptualists, whose outlook was just taking
- hold among younger artists when Wegman was at the University of
- Illinois in the mid-'60s, anything could be art so long as it
- wasn't a painting or sculpture, those luxury items that the
- galleries peddled to the bourgeoisie. Works were conceived as
- ideas to be preserved in whatever medium suggested itself--video, snapshots, the artist's own body--the more offhand the
- better.
- </p>
- <p> The West Coast branch of Conceptualism, which Wegman
- joined during the two years he spent in the Los Angeles area
- starting in 1970, had the best comedians. In his early days Ed
- Ruscha photographed parking-lot patterns from the air: a
- satirist's geometric abstraction. Bruce Nauman photographed
- himself performing visual puns, like shooting water from his
- mouth and calling the picture Self-Portrait as a Fountain. And
- Wegman started making deadpan videos of himself spraying an
- entire can of deodorant into his armpit. When his new Weimaraner
- got into the act, Wegman recognized that it was enough to tape
- the puppy doing something as simple as trying to extract a
- biscuit from a glass bottle. As a comic deflation of the
- doggedness of human endeavor, Man Ray's tireless noodling with
- his bottle ranks as a bit of theater that Samuel Beckett might
- have enjoyed.
- </p>
- <p> Wegman's blackout skits on video were followed in the '70s
- by cartoonish drawings and whimsies staged for the camera. Like
- the big, vaporous paintings he started showing in 1987, they
- have their moments of Thurberesque charm, but it's only the
- loopy dog pictures that click. Situated somewhere between
- Marcel Duchamp's cunning art pranks and David Letterman's Stupid
- Pet Tricks, they rib Conceptualism even as they lay out its
- possibilities. But in the end their effectiveness rests upon
- powers of portrait psychology that owe little to Conceptualist
- mind games.
- </p>
- <p> In Wegman's best pictures, his implacable dogs are a
- surrogate for the part of ourselves that we hold back from the
- world, above all in our moments of abject obedience. In one
- picture after another, the secret of Fay Ray's charm is the way
- she gets the last laugh, even when wrapped in aluminum foil, by
- facing down the camera with her own impenetrable self-enclosure.
- </p>
- <p> As a premium, Wegman's dogs can double as Surrealist found
- objects. In the 1990 Lolita, Fay Ray's puppy Battina is draped,
- sex-kitten-style, along a Le Corbusier chair. With her spindly
- legs and nipple-studded underside offered as cheesecake, Battina
- is a jolt, a dream of mutant sexuality as well as a reminder
- that the bulges we make such a fuss about on people are just
- their standard equipment as mammals.
- </p>
- <p> Does Wegman's work qualify as art if he can't keep a
- straight face? Why not? Dada was a punch line to the sick joke
- of World War I, Surrealism a field of comic non sequiturs, Pop
- art a pie in the face of solemn Abstract Expressionism. Given
- their devotion to whatever was ephemeral and disreputable, the
- Conceptualists were bound to go in for jokes, the second-class
- citizens of mental life. But the philosophical pitfall of
- Conceptualism is piffle, the temptation to be content with art
- lite. Or as Wegman once said, "As soon as I got funny, I killed
- any majestic intentions in my work."
- </p>
- <p> Sometimes even more modest intentions don't get satisfied.
- Quite a few of these big-eyed dog shots feel like visual
- one-liners that merely extend a Wegman product line that has
- bowwowed the art market. The pictures of Fay Ray dressed up in
- gowns and colonial housedresses are one step removed from those
- wallpaper murals of poker-playing bulldogs. Put her on roller
- skates, as Wegman has done, and she's just the thinking man's
- J. Fred Muggs.
- </p>
- <p> Maybe it was Wegman's own sense of dwindling returns from
- the dog pictures that led him to take up painting. His large
- canvases are covered in a thin, mottled wash of acrylic. It
- gives them the look of oversize watercolors, bringing to mind
- anything from the mists of J.M.W. Turner to Raoul Dufy's sunny
- mats of pigment. Bobbing to the surface of this broth are simple
- images--planes, ships, cowboys, Greek temples, water
- sprinklers--that Wegman adapts from such feeders to the
- collective unconscious as grade-school readers and illustrated
- encyclopedias. The aim may be to bring these generic memories
- into a suggestive mix or to poke at the juvenile sources of our
- mature assumptions, but Wegman's room-temperature musings don't
- clinch yet. You smile and wait for his ideas to coalesce, but...nothing.
- </p>
- <p> Maybe it doesn't matter. If painting doesn't work out for
- him, he can always go to the dogs again. It's probably just a
- matter of time before Battina too has puppies.
- </p>
-
- </body></article>
- </text>
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