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- <text id=93TT0313>
- <title>
- Oct. 04, 1993: The View From Piccadilly
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1993
- Oct. 04, 1993 On The Trail Of Terror
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- ART, Page 78
- The View From Piccadilly
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>In London, a survey of modern American art is spotty and distorted
- </p>
- <p>By ROBERT HUGHES
- </p>
- <p> Three weeks ago, an exhibition of the work of the English artists
- Gilbert and George opened at the National Art Gallery in Beijing.
- Its catalog bore a fulsome essay comparing the two "living sculptures"
- to Confucius himself and lamenting the utter decadence of so
- much Western art, which "seems to have lost any moral significance
- on account of its fruitless search for formal purity. Meaning
- and ornament...have been marginalized...The black square
- painting is a goal that can appeal only to very few aesthetes.
- Not only the black square but equally the crushed automobile,
- the Coca-Cola can, and other examples of Western cultural detritus,
- all threaten to take over the world."
- </p>
- <p> Then, a week later, an exhibition called "American Art in the
- 20th Century" opened at the Royal Academy of Arts in London.
- It contained some 230 works by 65 artists, spanning the period
- from 1913 to 1993. Among these were, as you might expect, quite
- a few of those black squares (Ad Reinhardt, 1913-67), crushed
- autos (John Chamberlain, born 1927) and Coca-Cola cans (Guess
- Who, 1928-87) spurned by the cultural critic of Beijing. And,
- again as you might expect, they are sympathetically, even rhapsodically
- treated in the catalog, written in part by the show's curators--Christos Joachimides in Berlin and Norman Rosenthal, the
- exhibitions secretary of the Royal Academy. "The time was right,"
- carols Rosenthal, reflecting on the postwar dominance of American
- art, "the market was right, and it was perhaps inevitable that
- after 1945 the American way should become the role model in
- art as much as in architecture, popular music, advertising and
- film."
- </p>
- <p> How true. And yet how curious. For Rosenthal wrote and signed
- the Beijing catalog essay too. Well, hey, Karl Marx used to
- say that capitalist culture harbored contradictions. But it
- took this English curator to bring them to the point of total
- cognitive dissonance: preening himself as the voice of American
- avant-gardes on one side of the world, slagging them off as
- "detritus" on the other.
- </p>
- <p> "American Art in the 20th Century" should have been a drop-dead
- show--but it isn't. Perhaps, given the internal struggle between
- Rosenthal of Beijing and Rosenthal of Piccadilly, it was doomed
- from the start. It sets out to trace the history--or what
- its curators consider the high points of the history--of American
- painting and sculpture from 1913, the date of the famed Armory
- Show, to the flatlands of our fin de siecle in 1993. But it
- has no intellectual cogency and, although it assembles a number
- of fine and historically emblematic works of art, it doesn't
- always locate them properly in the artists' outputs, so that
- they tend to look like so many flashes in the pan.
- </p>
- <p> A case in point is Jackson Pollock's early Mural, 1943, that
- magnificent wall of writhing protofigures, its passionate wristy
- drawing inspired by 1930s Picasso yet unmistakably leading to
- Pollock's mature style. But at the Royal Academy, it doesn't
- connect to a major "allover" painting by Pollock, because none
- could be borrowed. This problem repeats itself with other artists.
- Robert Rauschenberg's Canyon, 1959--that unforgettably poignant
- assemblage featuring a real, stuffed, blackened American eagle
- spreading its wings but equipped with a pillow in case it fails--needed backing up with more powerful work than this show
- could obtain. And the hanging can be awful; if you want to see
- two groups of excellent paintings kill each other, take a look
- at the room in which Mark Rothko's horizontals and Barnett Newman's
- vertical zips are left to slug it out.
- </p>
- <p> The full history of art doesn't inscribe itself in movements,
- in the U.S. or anywhere else. Yet this show is movement-fixated;
- it proposes a kind of historical shorthand, a rhetoric of innovations
- and "decisive breakthroughs." The curators go on at length about
- wanting to show those moments when the ball was first put in
- the cannon. Rosenthal even claims that a new American art experienced
- "parthenogenesis"--virgin birth, without a father--with
- Pollock's 1943 paintings.
- </p>
- <p> The trouble with this kind of approach is that first isn't always
- best. The history of American art abounds in artists who developed
- late and did their best work long after the movements they were
- first associated with had lost their impetus. Stuart Davis,
- for instance, was a far better painter in the 1930s than in
- the 1920s. The full unfolding of Robert Motherwell's talent,
- particularly in collage, happened after the prime years of Abstract
- Expressionism, and the same is true of Lee Krasner. (Not that
- it matters to this show, which includes neither of them.)
- </p>
- <p> Second, there is no shortage of Americans who weren't "movement"
- artists and yet turned into remarkable and even great figures
- in their own right--and these aren't included either. Isamu
- Noguchi doesn't figure in a show that is laden to the gunwales
- with 1960s Minimal sculpture; later its curators find space
- for Jeff Koons' twerpy silver train and floating basketball,
- but none for Richard Diebenkorn's figurative paintings or even
- his superbly Apollonian Ocean Parks.
- </p>
- <p> The sections dealing with Pop art and Minimalism are strong
- and, on the whole, well chosen--decadent though they may look
- in Beijing. But the historical structure is lame-brained because
- it ignores a vein of American art in the early 1960s that, though
- out of favor today, has a solid claim to inclusion: abstract
- color-field painting. Helen Frankenthaler, Kenneth Noland, Morris
- Louis do not appear and might never have existed. Instead the
- narrative goes straight from Abstract Expressionism to Pop.
- </p>
- <p> Granted, the old Greenbergian version of Modernism--the idea
- that art advances by shedding its superfluities and ending up
- in a state of idealized blandness, flat frontal sheets of color,
- a discourse of the medium alone--cuts no ice today. Granted,
- too, the recoil from such prescriptions was both inevitable
- and justified. And yet color-field painting did produce some
- very beautiful and rigorous works, and it is hard to see how
- an exhibition that includes six Jasper Johnses and five Andy
- Warhols could not have found room for a Morris Louis Unfurled
- or a Kenneth Noland target.
- </p>
- <p> The show gets imprisoned by its own generalizations. It's good
- that a serious attempt has been made to set pre-Abstract Expressionist
- painting before an English public. But American art in the 1920s
- is defined too narrowly, as being "about" cities, industry and
- visions (ironic or not) of progress based on technology. Its
- mystico-romantic landscape imagery gets edited out. See Marsden
- Hartley through his heraldic Cubist-based paintings of 1913-14,
- such as Portrait of a German Officer, that moving, coded valentine
- of homosexual love, but omit his later, grandly somber images
- of the Maine coast. Have Georgia O'Keeffe's skyscrapers, not
- her flowers. And, amazingly enough, leave out John Marin altogether,
- however much this may distort the actual story of American art
- between the world wars.
- </p>
- <p> Then there's the gender problem. Of the 66 artists on view,
- exactly five are women: O'Keeffe, Eva Hesse, Agnes Martin, Cindy
- Sherman and Jenny Holzer. You don't need to be a Guerrilla Girl
- to object to this. By what contorted standards of taste could
- Jonathan Borofsky's flatulent bits of pictorial free association,
- or Keith Haring's cute squiggle salads, be thought more original,
- let alone more beautiful, than the best work of, say, Susan
- Rothenberg, Nancy Graves, Elizabeth Murray or Vija Celmins?
- Where are those formidable senior talents, the two Louises,
- Bourgeois and Nevelson, without whom no account of the post-Surrealist
- vein in America can be adequate? And what about--but enough,
- enough already. One can see why there's a big self-portrait
- by Philip Guston, full of weltschmerz and peeking nervously
- over the top of a wall. He must have been expecting Norman of
- Beijing, not the other one.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
-