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- <text id=93TT0493>
- <title>
- Nov. 08, 1993: The Arts & Media:Art
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1993
- Nov. 08, 1993 Cloning Humans
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- THE ARTS & MEDIA, Page 83
- ART
- The Image Duplicator
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>At New York's Guggenheim Museum, a splashy retrospective hails
- the ironies of Pop's cool and ever reliable academic
- </p>
- <p>By ROBERT HUGHES
- </p>
- <p> In the retrospective of more than 100 paintings by Roy Lichtenstein,
- curated by Diane Waldman for the Guggenheim Museum, you can
- almost cut the atmosphere of deja vu with a knife. Doubtless,
- part of this is due to the artist's prolonged success in the
- marketplace; Lichtenstein is a very prolific artist, and his
- works are in most museums. But their effect has spread far beyond
- the originals. His images, coming initially out of mass reproduction
- itself, slide back into it with the utmost ease and have done
- so for the past 30 years, filling memory with tiny Lichtenstein
- clones.
- </p>
- <p> Then you have to reckon with their effect on ads, packaging,
- T shirts, window design in shops, the whole reappropriation
- party--amusing and even joyous at first, and then, like most
- parties, a drag--that the American commercial world threw
- to welcome back the images and techniques Lichtenstein took
- from it and put into a zippier, more art-conscious form, ripe
- for reuse as "quality" stuff.
- </p>
- <p> There was nothing quality-ridden about the artist's original
- sources--a smudgy, one-column figure of a girl with a beach
- ball advertising a resort in the Poconos, a moony frame from
- a romance comic. But by the time such things had been run through
- the loop from ad to art to ad again, they had become as invested
- with glamour as a photo by Avedon. The sheer pervasiveness of
- Lichtenstein's style rivals and maybe even exceeds Warhol's,
- even though, unlike Warhol, he kept his own distance from the
- ad industry as an artist and never offered himself to it as
- a celebrity. Thus for the young, Lichtenstein must seem to have
- been around forever, while for the middle-aged there is no recapturing
- that first shock of seeing big, painted comic strips on a gallery
- wall back in the early '60s.
- </p>
- <p> Time has done its annoying work, converting Lichtenstein into
- a historical figure remarkable for his taste, his dependable
- virtuosity and his pictorial manners. He has become the great
- academician of the Pop movement--its equivalent of Sir Lawrence
- Alma-Tadema, the English artist who, a hundred years ago, attained
- the summit of popularity with his idealized, skillfully painted
- and mildly sexy reconstructions of classical Roman life, done
- again, and again, and again.
- </p>
- <p> You can't imagine people asking themselves with bated breath,
- "What will Lichtenstein do next?" You know the answer, although
- the exact image he will do it to is as yet unknown. It will
- be done very well, probably on a huge canvas, with perfect decorum
- and an unfaltering sense of design, every black line in its
- right place, not a slippage in the stripes and Benday dots.
- Its flat, posterish colors will read with infrangible aplomb.
- It will parody other art, as in the past Lichtenstein's work
- has parodied everything from Art Deco to synthetic Cubism, from
- Franz Marc's horses to Monet's versions of Rouen Cathedral,
- from Mondrian's squares to the generic brushstroke of late Abstract
- Expressionism. It will have a number of concealed jokes for
- the art-initiated, often genuinely funny ones--as when, redoing
- Matisse's Still Life with "Dance" in 1974, Lichtenstein inserted
- a comic-strip blast of musical notes to give the figures something
- to jive to and popped a straw-bound Chianti flask (an archetypal
- kitsch symbol of the artist's studio) into the still life in
- the foreground.
- </p>
- <p> Last, it will "carry" well, because Lichtenstein is a master
- of elision and compression--and this is why his paintings
- manage, against all the architectural odds, to defeat Frank
- Lloyd Wright's hostility to any picture unlucky enough to fetch
- up in the Guggenheim. The one thing it will not do, however,
- is purge your emotions through pity and terror.
- </p>
- <p> On the other hand, you can't really blame Roy Lichtenstein for
- not living up to Sophocles. Tragic elevation--or at least
- the version of it promoted by the rhetoric of late Abstract
- Expressionism--was exactly what he reacted against when he
- started out during the early '60s. Was real American art loaded
- with signs of commitment and authenticity--Pollock drips,
- De Kooning stripes? Then Lichtenstein would go to the opposite
- extreme and paint thin copies of the least arty things within
- reach: romance and adventure comic strips.
- </p>
- <p> He reacted to these crude and, in most eyes, culturally negligible
- designs in the way an earlier American stylist, Elie Nadelman,
- had responded to anonymous folk art. He found beauty and a sort
- of wry pathos in them, along with a disregarded but distinct
- sense of style. Lichtenstein wasn't the first artist to react
- to American comic strips. Miro is plausibly said to have been
- influenced by George Herriman's now classic Krazy Kat. Apart
- from Stuart Davis, however, he was the first American artist
- to do so, because American artists had always been rather ashamed
- of their own vernacular.
- </p>
- <p> Lichtenstein's early strip-based paintings deserve all the enthusiasm
- they have evoked. Like the Iliad, they come in two basic subjects:
- girls and war; sometimes, as in The Kiss, 1962, both appear
- together. The comic frame is the key that enabled Lichtenstein
- to unlock his nostalgia for experiences he was old enough to
- have had but didn't--he went into a pilot training program
- in Mississippi in 1944 and might have been that pink boy embracing
- his sweetheart in front of the bomber. His girls are the nymphs
- of a lost Arcadia of gush, as remote from us now as Gibson girls
- were from the '60s. Their innocence is oddly counterpointed
- by the naivete with which they are painted.
- </p>
- <p> Astutely, Lichtenstein realized that the halftone dots of a
- printed comic strip could be enlarged along with the rest of
- the image, but at that stage he didn't know how to do it evenly:
- he used stencils that smudged, so the big areas of neck and
- cheek came out with a random sort of acne. They now look touchingly
- handmade, which is not to their disadvantage, and their sense
- of formal rigor has lasted well.
- </p>
- <p> Lichtenstein has been typecast as "the comic-strip artist,"
- but in fact comic strips take up only an early phase of his
- work. By 1965 he had stopped basing images on them. He was never
- to refer to comics again, except now and then by including a
- parody of one of his own earlier paintings in a parody of an
- elegant interior--ah, well, I'm a classic too now, feels funny
- but that's art-life.
- </p>
- <p> Instead he turned to incongruous subjects that didn't fit his
- achieved style: huge versions of Abstract Expressionist brushstrokes,
- perversely rendered in flat color and Benday dots; or, most
- successfully, mirrors. The Mirror paintings of 1969-72 remain
- entrancing because of all Lichtenstein's later work, they are
- the only ones in which his now cleaned-up techniques allowed
- for a degree of mystery and ambiguity: they are perfect and
- icy, and reflect nothing but themselves--a proleptic comment
- on his own future work.
- </p>
- <p> Then he started doing other pictorial styles as subjects of
- his own. Picasso, Fernand Leger, Carlo Carra, Max Beckmann and
- so on. Then kitsch Modernism, as imagined by cartoonists. The
- trouble with these versions of Modernist classics 'n' clinkers
- is their sameness. After a while, it isn't very interesting
- to be shown that just about anything can be turned into a Lichtenstein,
- congealed in his cryogenic style. There's none of the engaged
- imagination, the sense of a transforming mind at work, that
- one gets in, say, Miro's wild versions of a 17th century Dutch
- interior, down the road at the Museum of Modern Art. Lichtenstein's
- are clever and highly worked, but while acknowledging their
- wit and skill, you would rather be looking at the real origins
- of these pastiches. Civilized irony is a grace and an asset,
- but it doesn't need to be pumped up to the size of the Sistine
- ceiling. In this later work, one sees the triumph of industry
- over inspiration. "What do you know about my Image Duplicator?"
- snarled a mad scientist in one of Lichtenstein's early paintings.
- What we know about Lichtenstein's own Image Duplicator is that
- by now it works too well.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
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