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- <text id=93TT2296>
- <title>
- Dec. 27, 1993: The Arts & Media:Art
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1993
- Dec. 27, 1993 The New Age of Angels
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- THE ARTS & MEDIA, Page 74
- ART
- The Fat Lady Sings
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>An exhibit affirms Lucian Freud, 71, as the best realist painter
- alive
- </p>
- <p>By Robert Hughes
- </p>
- <p> Most artists, one imagines, dream of achieving a great late
- style--the uprush and resolution in old age, careless of aesthetic
- risk, sometimes even a little mad, that carry a life's effort
- into profundity. Few, obviously, manage anything of the sort.
- The retrospective of paintings by Lucian Freud, 71, which opened
- last week at New York City's Metropolitan Museum of Art, sets
- before us one who has.
- </p>
- <p> To see Freud's new work at full stretch, one need only look
- at the final painting in the show, finished just last month
- (too late for the catalog): Evening in the Studio. It shows
- the inside of the artist's London workplace, a medium-size and
- undistinguished room with blotched walls. There is an iron bed
- on whose thin, lumpy mattress a whippet sleeps. Next to the
- bed is a scrawny-looking girl with an angular face, sewing an
- ornate piece of Indian cotton whose green and red whorls cascade
- over her lap like the tendrils of an exotic plant, out of place
- in the drab surroundings. But it is not these things you notice--not, anyway, at first.
- </p>
- <p> What you see, what confronts and monopolizes your gaze, is a
- woman on the floor in the foreground. Her bulk is colossal,
- almost comic. She simply blows away the decorum of the nude--the ideal body re-formed by thought. She isn't nude but aggressively
- naked, a biological mountain: swollen thighs and belly, pubic
- ravine, breasts like boulders, their stretch marks and blotches
- half-echoing the surface texture of the girl's cloth. The strength
- of her presence isn't due just to her depicted fatness but to
- the way the image burgeons from dense paint, a heavy mass like
- cream with gravel in it. For in his own way Freud has done (in
- this picture and others) what Velazquez did: assimilate the
- life of the subject to the life of the paint surface and of
- each gesture held in it. Very few painters can do this. It is
- not a trick. This is the difference between painting something
- and merely rendering it--between Freud's fat woman, which
- is radical art of the highest intensity, and, say, Fernando
- Botero's fat women, which are boring essays in the pneumatics
- of style.
- </p>
- <p> Freud's last show in America was at the Hirshhorn Museum in
- Washington in 1987. It didn't go to New York. It wasn't modern
- enough for the Museum of Modern Art; and at the Met there was
- a suspicion that, as one of its senior staff remarked, "Lucian
- can be wonderful one picture at a time, but a row of 20 could
- be a bit of a bore." Happily, the museum has now changed its
- tune and hung some 80 Freuds, the earliest done in 1945, the
- latest finished this year.
- </p>
- <p> It is not, to put it mildly, a bit of a bore. For Freud, despite
- his quota of failed pictures (failed, however, by standards
- to which most living artists don't aspire), is the best realist
- painter alive. To watch the development of his work--even
- in the abbreviated form of one show--is like watching a wily
- cock salmon compelled upstream by instinct, against the cataracts
- of modernist history, following its desires. Most of the major
- stylistic events in art since 1900, starting with late Cezanne
- and going on through Cubism to abstraction in its various forms,
- have had no apparent impact on Freud's painting. He is a rebuke
- to superficial notions of determinism.
- </p>
- <p> Freud, grandson of Sigmund, was born in Germany in 1922. He
- grew up in Berlin, but his parents brought him to London in
- 1939, barely in front of the rising wave of Nazi persecution.
- In England his schooling was irregular and "progressive"--even today his handwriting is that of a 10-year-old--and although
- he had some art training, he was basically self-taught. Freud's
- German origins have suggested to some critics that early works
- like Girl with Roses, 1947-48, a portrait of his first wife,
- Kitty Garman, daughter of the sculptor Jacob Epstein, were done
- under the spell of the German Neue Sachlichkeit (New Objectivity)
- portraiture of the 1920s--painters like Otto Dix or Christian
- Schad. Actually the basis was much earlier: Albrecht Durer,
- whose fixedly staring, ultradetailed watercolors set Freud's
- first standards about the inspection of faces and bodies.
- </p>
- <p> Then, around 1958, Freud took to using stiffer brushes--hog
- hair, not sable--that forced broader and more pictorially
- solid shapes into the paint with which he depicted flesh, helping
- him compose the body's structure in terms of twisting and displacement.
- This "Freud effect" is not unlike the quick, coarse expressiveness
- of Frans Hals, but less benign. A broader stroke didn't diminish
- the closeness of his inspection. If Velazquez had ever chosen
- to paint water dribbling from a spout, he might have come up
- with the sort of brilliant fiction about unstable, passing appearances
- that Freud achieved in Two Japanese Wrestlers by a Sink, 1983-87.
- (The "Japanese wrestlers" of the title are not real sumo contenders,
- but fragmentary pictures of them pinned to the wall.) There
- are amazing feats of sheer visual dissection in this show, such
- as the view from the studio window, Wasteground with Houses,
- Paddington, 1970-72, or Two Plants, 1977-80, in which it seems
- that every leaf of hundreds has been given its own specific
- color, structure and marking in a way that John Ruskin might
- have approved.
- </p>
- <p> Ruskin would not, however, have approved of Freud's nudes, any
- more than some feminists do today. These figures, splayed under
- the inquisitorial electric light and the downward gaze of the
- artist, are the mainstay of his work, and the fierceness with
- which they reject the softening conventions of the "studio nude"
- has provoked a bumper crop of balderdash about Freud's supposed
- misogyny and sexism. (Freud's own riposte, in a recent interview,
- was terse: "I think the idea of misogyny is a stimulant to feminists,
- and it's rather like anti-Semites looking for Jewish noses everywhere.")
- </p>
- <p> You can hardly not know--given the amount of gossip that has
- lately dropped on Freud's closely guarded personal life--that
- all the models are people with some specific relation to the
- artist as friends, lovers, daughters. But the nature of that
- relationship doesn't appear in the painting, and everyone is
- treated with the same relentless scrutiny of physical fact,
- so that a chin or an elbow acquires the same intensity, as painting,
- as a breast or a pubic mound. The results have much to do with
- modeling--physical manipulation, as though the body were being
- reconstructed in the medium of paint, crowded with bumps and
- hollows, and bursting with life.
- </p>
- <p> Since the late '80s, Freud's work has become more audacious
- in its ability to deal with extremes of physical presence without
- sliding into caricature. In part this is due to his finding
- a new model in the form of Leigh Bowery, a huge, soft, hairless,
- child-faced, pierced-cheeked performance artist who might, in
- earlier days, have modeled Bacchuses for Rubens. Freud's paintings
- of this man-mountain are done in a spirit not far from amazement:
- his excitement in traversing Bowery's back in Naked Man, Back
- View, 1991-92, is so palpable that you'd think he was exploring
- a new landscape--as, in fact, he was.
- </p>
- <p> Life or art? Both. Freud insists that he always lets his sitters
- take their own natural poses, rather than setting them up--as well they might, given the arduous business of being painted
- for 80 sittings or more under the glare of the 200-watt bulbs
- in his studio. But whether by accident or design, flashbacks
- to past art do crop up regularly.
- </p>
- <p> It probably isn't possible to paint a naked human back without
- remembering Ingres's bathers, but Bowery's pose also recalls
- Goya's giant looming over its landscape. The conjunction of
- his massive and dynamically arched trunk with the waiflike body
- of the sleeping girl in And the Bridegroom, 1993, evokes the
- gross strong men and tiny dancers of Picasso's Rose Period.
- The lanky bodies on the iron studio bed in Two Women, 1992,
- are a little like Courbet's lesbians, without the Second Empire
- titillation. A naked man on his back, one leg up and a sock
- dangling from the other foot, penis flopping askew, turns out
- to echo closely the pose of that Hellenistic image of postbacchanalian
- fatigue, the Barberini Faun. And so on. Freud doesn't quote
- ostentatiously, but he is an artist with a full memory--as
- any serious painter must be. There is no level on which he could
- be accused of having an "innocent eye."
- </p>
- <p> Can one imagine a painter like Freud emerging in America today?
- It's hard to, maybe impossible. He affronts too many orthodoxies,
- starting with the central one: the belief that realism--the
- painting of things from direct observation, warts and all--is dead or, at best, irrelevant. You may quote the human figure
- from mass-media sources, by means of photography, silk-screen
- and so forth. Or stylize the guts out of it, so that it approaches
- abstraction. Or else run "expressionist" variants on it, which
- have nothing to say about any struggle with the real and resistant
- motif, since no such struggle is encouraged.
- </p>
- <p> American official taste--late-modernist taste--shows no
- real or sustained interest in artists who are prepared to make
- a life's work out of the challenge of imbuing real figures and
- objects with strong plastic meaning in deep space. There are
- a few exemptions, such as Philip Pearlstein, but that is all,
- unless you want to count Andrew Wyeth's Helgas, those goose-pimply
- feminine-hygiene ads that are to painting more or less what
- The Bridges of Madison County is to the novel. It seems that
- with the single exception of Thomas Eakins, who died more than
- 75 years ago, this culture has never produced a great painter
- of the naked body. It's pinups or diagrams, and not much in
- between.
- </p>
- <p> As a result, the human figure, which for thousands of years
- was the container and vehicle of art's most exalted as well
- as its coarsest intentions, languishes in late-modern American
- painting like a vestigial sign, atrophied. This is not because
- abstract art attained its Utopian ends of making representation
- obsolete--we all know it didn't--but because the culture
- forgot that there was anything to do with bodies and faces except
- photograph them. It's as though America, maddened and warped
- by its own erotomania, its obsession with and fear of the flesh,
- and further blocked by its newly acquired worries about sexual
- politics, can no longer imagine how to paint a naked human being.
- And even if it wanted to, the skills needed to do so have been
- edited out of all but a few art schools and are, in the main,
- no longer taught.
- </p>
- <p> What passes for avant-garde style today is mostly recycled and
- tired, a thrice-dipped tea bag. There is not only a place but
- a burning need for art whose images are worldly, skilled, robustly
- embodied and keenly felt. This is what Freud, by taking nothing
- for granted and looking over the very brink of his perceptions,
- supplies.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
-