203 41 104MB
English Pages 498 Year 1993
HftRIN
1
COUNTY FREE LIBRfiRY
31111014796690
AMERICAN AI?f Painting and Sculpture "" 1913-1993
20th
-^:^,
^ Prestel
century
American Art
Cennrry
in the 20th
Painting and Sculpture 1913-1993 Edited by Christos
Norman
M. Joachimides and
Rosenthal
Co-ordinating Editor: David Anfam
490 pages with 516 American Art a series of
colour
illustrations, 252 in full
in the 20th
Century
monographs devoted
is
the fourth volume in
and sculp-
to painting
ture in various coimtries since the early years of this century. Published in conjunction with an exhibition at
the Alartin-Gropius-Bau in Berlin and the Royal
Academy of .\rts, London,
it
pro\'ides an extensive,
copiously illustrated survey of the subject that to
become
The
a
is
certain
standard work.
history of the \-isual arts in the United States
during
this
century
is
one of assimilation followed by an
explosion of indigenous creativit\' that altered the
course of art.
The Armor\- Show,
1913, introduced
in
held in
Americans to the
European modernism.
Xo
impact of Marcel Duchamp,
less
who
latest
New York in developments
profound was the first
usited
New York
in 1915
and was to acquire cardinal importance
mentor
to several generations of Americans
tioned traditional notions of
art.
The
as a
who
ques-
inter-war years
were marked by American artists coming to terms with European movements - especially Cubism, Dada and Surrealism - yet such outstanding figures as
Edward Hopper and Joseph Cornell were expression to
world.
a quintessentially
The two
Man Ray,
able to give
.American \'iew of the
poles of that \-iew - an espousaJ of the
sublime and a concern with the minutiae of everyday realit}- - have characterized art in the USA ever since. It
was
in the
mid- 1940s, with the genesis of Abstract
Expressionism, that American art achieved through.
The
painting of Jackson Pollock,
its
break-
\Mllem de
Kooning and Bamett Newman shook the very foundations of that art and, together with the work of Ad Reinhardt,
Mark Rothko,
Ch-fford
and others, ensured America's
Still,
artistic
Da\-id
Smith
pre-eminence
in
New York replaced Paris as the centre of the international art world. A reaction against Abstract
the 1950s.
Expressionism became noticeable in the mid-1950s. In the early
work of Jasper Johns and Robert Rauschen-
berg, for example, Abstract Expressionist techniques
were wedded to objects concern with evervday
ft-om everyday experience.
realit}' lay
This
behind the emergence
when artists such as Roy Andy \\ arhol explored the world pre-
of Pop Art in the early 1960s, Lichtenstein and
sented by the media in a seemingly impersonal manner. continued on back flap
Prestel
CIVIC CEr^TER nil
3 111
il
Hum
01479 6690
American Art in
the 20th Century
'•
Patrons of the Exhibition
Her Majesty The Queen
Dr Richard von Weizsacker President of the Federal Republic of Germany
Wilham
J.
CHnton
President of the United States of America
Advisory Committee Felix
Baumann
Walter Hopps Richard Koshalek
Thomas Krens William S.Lieberman Franz Meyer
David Ross Katharina Schmidt
Wieland Schmied Nicholas Serota
American Art in
the 20th Century Painting and Sculpture
1913-1993
Edited by
Christos
M. Joachimides and Norman Rosenthal
Co-ordinating Editor
David Anfam
Essays by
Brooks Adams, David Anfam, Richard Armstrong, John Beardsley,
Neal Benezra, Achilla Bonito Oliva, Arthur C. Danto, Abraham A. Da\idson, Wolfgang Max Faust, Mary Emma Harris, Christos M. Joachimides, Thomas Kellein, Donald Kuspit, Mary Lublin, Karal Ann Marling, Barbara Moore, Francis V. O'Connor, Stephen Polcari, Carter Ratcliff, Norman Rosenthal, Irving Sandler, Wieland Schmied, Peter Selz, Gail Stavitsky and Douglas Tallack
Prestel
1
This
is
the fourth
volume
to appear in conjunction with the series
of exhibitions of twentieth-century art
shown
Royal Academy of Arts,
at the
London. Already published: Geiynan Art in the 20th Centinj: Painting and Sailpture igo^-igS^ (1985) British Ait in the 20th Centiny: The Modem Movement (1987)
An in the 20th Centwy: Paintiiig and Sculpture
Italiaji
ip 00 -1^88 (1989)
on the occasion of the exhibition
First published
'American Art in the 20th Century: Painting and Sculpture 191 3-1993', held at the Alartin-Gropius-Bau, Berlin, 8
May- 2 5 July
1993, and the
Royal Academy of Arts and the Saatchi Gallery, London, 16
September- 1 2 December 1993.
Exhibition organized by Christos
©
1993 by Prestel-Verlag, Munich, Royal
ZEITGEIST-Gesellschaft
e.
M. Joachimides and Norman
Rosenthal.
Academy of Arts, London, and
V., Berlin
© of works illustrated by the artists, their heirs and assigns, except in the following cases: Carl .\ndre, Richard Artschwager, Jean-AIichel Basquiat, Joseph Beuys, .\lexander Calder,
Wlllem de Kooning, Marcel Duchamp, Dan
Stuart Da\TS,
Jasper Johns, Joseph Kosuth, Sol LeWltt,
Roy
Sam
Flavin,
Lichtenstein,
Man
Francis, Arshile Gorky,
Ray, Robert Mangold,
Andre Masson, Roberto Matta Echaurren, Robert Motherwell, Bruce Nauman, Kenneth Noland, Georgia O'Keeffe, Francis Picabia, Pablo Picasso, Jackson Pollock, Robert Rauschenberg, Ad Reinhardt,
James Rosenquist, Mark Rothko, Richard Lawrence VVeiner,
Tom Wesselmann
Joseph Cornell by
The Joseph and Robert
Andy
\\^arhol
Fig. 9, p. 136:
© of
all
Cover
David Smith, Frank
Serra,
and Grant
Wood by VG
Mark
Tobey,
Cornell Memorial Foundation, Houston;
by The Andy Warhol Foundation for the Visual
© Christo
Stella,
Bild-Kunst, Bonn, 1993;
Arts, Inc.,
New York,
1993.
1976
other documents, see Photographic Acknowledgments, pp. 484-5
illustration:
Robert Rauschenberg, Canyon, 1959
German: Da\id
Translation frmn the
(detail, Cat.
137)
Britt (Christos iM. Joachimides),
John Brownjohn (Thomas
Kellein),
John \Mlliam Gabriel (Wieland Schmied) and John Ormrod (Wolfgang Max Faust) Translation from the Italian: ]o2ichim
Prestel-Verlag, Mandlstrasse 26, Tel. (89) 38
Xeugroschel (Achille Benito OUva)
Hartung
Picture research: Elisabeth
D- 80802 Munich, Germany
17090; Fax (89) 38 170935
Distributed in Continental Europe by Prestel-Verlag
Verlegerdienst Miinchen
Gutenbergstrasse
3881
Tel. (8105)
KG
Co.
Fax (8105) 388100
17;
Distributed in the
GmbH &
D-82205 Gilching, Germany
i,
USA and Canada on behalf of Prestel New York, X^^ 100 10, USA
by
te
Xeues Publishing Company,
16 W'est 22 nd Street, Tel. (212) 6
279090; Fax (212) 6 2795
«
1
Distributed in Japan on behalf of Prestel by Distribution Agenc\', 14-9 Tel. (3) 32
0801
81;
Fax
(3) 32
Distributed in the United
Thames
&
Hudson
Tel. (71) 6 36 54 S8;
Okubo 3-chomo,
YOHx\N Western
Publications
Shinjuku-ku, J-Tokyo 169
0902 88
Kingdom, Ireland and
all
Ltd., 30-34 Bloomsbur\' Street,
remaining countries on behalf of Prestel by
London WC1B3QP, England
Fax (71) 6 36 16 59
Cover designed by Nicolaus Ott
+ Bernard Stein
GmbH, Munich A'SO Merk & Steitz, Villingen-Schwenningen
Typeset by Gerbtr Satz Offset lithography
Printed by .^ppl,
ij'
Wemding
Bound by MIB Conzella, Aschheim Printed in
ISBN
Germany
3-7913-1261-8 (English edition)
•
ISBN
3-7913-1240-5 (German edition)
3
1
Contents
Sir Roger de Grey
Christos
M. Joachimides
Foreword
7
Wrenching America's Impulse Notes on Art
Norman
Rosenthal
Arthur
C.
Danto
Douglas Tallack
Abraham A. Davidson Wieland Schmied Francis V.
O'' Connor
American
USA A View from
in the
Art:
having Sandler
David Ailfam
Mary Emma
Harris
9
Europe
Philosophizing American Art
Brooks Adams
Neal Benezra
Precisionist
The
1930s:
Early Modernism in America 39 View and American Scene: The 1920s 47 Notes on the Transition from Social to Individual
John Beardsley Wolfgang Max Faust
Beginning
at the
New York Intermedia: The
1960s:
'To Speak Another Language':
Antiform: 1965-1970
Land Art
The
Mai'ling
Peter Selz
Thomas
Kellein
Achille Bonito Oliva
The Energy
Critique of Painting and the
in the
Electric':
in
the Sheer Size:
The Western
The
139
151
From
Stieglitz to Castelli
Erotic Dimension in American Art is it
Art?
171
to
American Art
187
Frontiers of Internationalism: Europe-America
201
203
Biographies of the Artists Selected Bibliography
The Authors
439
478
482
Photographic Acknowledgments Index of Names
165
177
European Responses
Artists in the Exhibition
Catalogue
of Transformation
Twentieth Century:
America: But
Americans Abroad It's
117
145
the Collector
American Galleries
The Media
99
133
Primary and Secondary
'The Body
in the 1960s
107
125
Shattered Orthodoxy:
The Museum and
KaralAnn
77
93
Happenings and Fluxus
Notes on Camelot
Gail Stavitsky
Carter Ratclijf
69
Black Mountain College: European Modernism, the Experimental Spirit
Critics,
Lublin
in the 1940s
The Noise of Traffic on the Way to Walden Pond End: The Extremes of Abstract Expressionism 85
Abstract Expressionism:
Donald Kuspit
Maiy
Scale in the Art
61
Modernist History and Surrealist Imagination: American Art
Beginnings of Minimal and Conceptual Art Richard Armstrong
29
The Armory Show and
and the American Avant-Garde Barbara Moore
1
2
Culture, Politics and Society in Mid-Century America
of the Depression Era Stephen Polcari
into Art:
4H6
484
195
157
Lenders to the Exhibition
Amsterdam,
Museum Museum
Stedelijk
The
Baltimore,
Baltimore
Basle, Offentliche Kunstsammlung Kunstmuseum
Berne,
Pittsburgh,
of Art
Museum
The
Saint Louis .Art
Muzeum Ludwig NT, Albright-Knox Art Gallen* Cambridge, ALA, Fogg Art Museum, Hanard Universit)* Art Museums
Courtesy Galerie Rudolf Kicken, Cologne,
and Galerie
.Art
Art
Llm, Llmer .Museum
Chicago,
Museum
Des
Aloines, L\,
Detroit,
The
Diisseldorf,
CoUection of Richard E. Lang, Jane Da\"is, Aledina,
Utica, NY', .Munson-\Mlliams-Proctor Institute,
Aluseum of .Art
Washington,
Des Moines Art Center
Wichita, KS, ^^lchita
Youngstown,
Detroit Institute of Arts
Kunstsammlung Xordrhein-
DC, The
American
Fort
.\rt
.Museum of
Houston,
OH, The Buder Institute
of
of Alodem Art City",
The
of Iowa .Museum
of.\rt
NE, Sheldon
Lincoln, len,-,
L'niversit}-
.Memorial
.\rt
Gal-
of N ebraska
Thomas .Ammann
Madrid, Thyssen-Bornemisza Collection .Art
.Mayer, Diisseldorf
der-O'Reilly Galleries, Inc.,
.Muriel Kallis
Norman Braman
Eli
and Ed\-the L. Broad Collection
Eli
Broad Family Foundation. Santa
Leo
Castelli,
Onnasch
New York
S.
Newman
Collection, Berlin
The Pace Galler\-, New York Ron and .Ann Pizzuri Richard and Lois Plehn,
New York
New York
Collection of Kate Rothko Prizel
New York New York
Regis Corporation, .MinneapoHs, .Minnesota
Galler}-,
Collection of Christopher Rothko
Cramer
Andrew J. Crispo
Center
Hans
Patsy R. and Ray-mond D. Nasher, Dallas
Collection Imia und
Douglas
New York
.Art
Honoria Donnelly Alurphy, courtesy Salan-
Zurich
Cohen
Galler\-,
.\driana and Robert .Mnuchin
Paula Cooper,
ary.Art
Walker
Courtesy of .Marlborough
Galerie .Marion Alever, Paris
.Art,
Zurich
Collection
Los Angeles, The .Museum of Contempor-
.Minneapolis,
Fine
.Monica, California
London, Tate Gallery
.Margulies Family Collection
Alarx Collection, BerHn
Courtesv .Marc Blondeau, Paris
L*niversit\'
New York
Gallen,-,
Courtesy Galerie Bruno Bishofberger,
Collection
Humlebaek, Denmark, Louisiana .Museum Iowa
Brice .Marden, courtesy .Matthew Alarks
Marlborough International Fine
.Art
Galerie Bruno Bishofberger, Zurich
The Alenil
Lewis and Susan Alanilow
Galerie
Courtesv
W brth
Collection Loic Malle, Paris
The
.Museum
.Art
Eindhoven, The Netherlands, Stedelijk \ an
Abbemuseum Fort \^brth, TX. .Modern
Bochum, and Richard Serra
Galerie m,
PhiUips Collection
Zurich. Kunsthaus Ziirich
Westfalen
Saatchi Collection,
New York
Collection,
London
Seibu Department Stores, Ltd, Tok\-o
New York
Newark, The Newark Aluseum
Stefan T. Edlis Collection
Sonnabend Collection,
New Haven,
Collection of the Air and Airs Barney
Southwestern Bell Corporation, San
Beinecke Rare Book and
.Manuscript Library-, Yale Lniversitv"
.A.
New Haven, Yale L niversitv" Art Galler\' New York, The Brookly-n Aluseum New York, Solomon R.Guggenheim Aluseum
New York, The .Metropolitan .Museum
of
New York,
Whitney .Museum of .American
Norfolk. \ A,
The
Chrysler
Museum
Pully/Lausanne, F.AE Alusee
d'.Axt
Louis
Richard L. Feigen,
.Antonio,
Lucien Treillard
Allen Alemorial
.Art
S.
Frohlich Collection, Stuttgart
Collection
JW Froehlich L^K, Ltd
Galerie .Michael Werner, Cologne and
A
Collection of .Mrs
Mctor
The
W Ganz
\'elde,
.Antwerp
New
.Mr and .Mrs Bagley \\ right
Gallen,-,
New
Donald A'oung
Gallery, Seattie
York
Aluseum,
Gabriele Henkel Collection, courtesy
Netherlands, Rijksmuseum
Kroller-Aluller
Ronny Aan de
York
2000, Paris
.Mr and .Mrs Ronald Greenberg,
Oberlin College
and J. Vandermolen
Collection FR.AC de Bourgogne, Dijon
St.
Louis
Galerie Karsten Greve, Cologne and Paris
OH,
TX
Air Hiroshi Teshigahara
New York
Contem-
porain
Otterlo,
St.
.Mrs Jack .M. Farris
Courtesy Barbara Gladstone
..Art
Oberlin,
Ebsworth Foundation,
Galerie 1900
.-Art
AI.
A\A
Collection AI. and .Mme.A.drien.Maeght, Paris
DC, Hirshhom Aluseum and
Sculpture Garden, Smithsonian Institution
Washington,
of Art
.Alain Pa\-iot, Paris
Collection of Jon and Barbara Landau
Washington, DC, National Galler\- of .Art
Cologne, Aluseum Ludwig Dallas, Dallas
neue Kunst
fiir
Museum
Seattle, Seattle
Buffalo,
The Art Institute of Chicago Musemn of Contemporan- Art
Jasper Johns
Ellsworth Kelly
Budapest,
Chicago,
.Museum
San Francisco, San Francisco Musevim of
Schaffhausen, Hallen
.Arts
Jedermann Collection, N..A
San Diego, Aluseum of Contemporary Art .Modern
Boston, -Museum of Fine
.Audrey and Sidnev Imias, Los .Angeles
Dakis Joannou, .Athens
Louis,
St.
Kunstmuseum Bern
of .Art
gen
Basel,
Bloomington, Indiana Universit}- Art
The Carnegie .Museum
Rotterdam, .Museum Bo\inans-van Beunin-
Strelow, Diisseldorf
The
Estate of Eva Hesse and courtesy
Robert
.Miller Gallerv,
New York
Hans
and lenders
who
wish to remain
anommous
Foreword
'American Art in the 20th Century'
is
the fourth exhibition in a series initiated by the
Royal Academy of Arts which has attempted to survey the most important
developments of
this century^
The
countn^ by country^
'German Art in the 20th Century', followed two years
series
later
by
began
'British
in
artistic
1985 with
Art in the 20th
Centur)'' and, in 1989, by 'Italian Art in the 20th Centun*'.
The
exhibition of American art has been organized jointly by the Royal
of Arts and the Zeitgeist-Gesellschaft in Berlin, where the Martin-Gropius-Bau.
It
it
was seen
Academy
earlier this year at
Norman Rosenthal, Exhibitions M. Joachimides, Secretary General of
has been selected by
Secretan^ of the Royal Academy, and Christos
the Zeitgeist-Gesellschaft. 'American Art in the 20th Centur\'' differs from the pre-
vious sun^eys in two significant ways. First,
it
has not been selected by experts from
the country- in question, but rather is presented from a ly,
this exhibition highlights art created
sors were weighted towards the
first
European point of \aew. Second-
between 1945 and 1970, while
decades of the century.
fear of contradiction that, during those twenty- five years,
ing force behind many,
aim has been
if
It
its
predeces-
can be said with
American
art
little
was the driv-
not most, developments in art throughout the world.
Our
to present the essence of America's contribution to the visual arts.
We are deeply honoured that Her Majesty The Queen, Dr Richard von Weizsacker, President of the Federal Republic of Germany, and
Mr \Mlliam J. Clinton, President
of the United States of .\merica, have graciously accepted to act as Patrons of the exhibition.
Academy were never going to be large enough to represent adequately all the artists we might have wished to include, many of whose works make ven' particular spatial demands. So we are especially grateful to Charles Saatchi, who has made his Galler\' in Boundan,' Road available to us. For years it has been among the finest spaces in London for showing It
was clear from the outset that the
galleries
of the Royal
contemporary^ trends in art and has an international reputation of the highest calibre.
We
Royal Academy
trust that visitors to the
will
not
fail
to
make
the journey to the
Saatchi Galler}- to complete their impression of this ambitious exhibition.
We
whose generous contribution has alare also most grateful for the support of
are greatly indebted to Merrill L\Tich,
lowed us to go ahead with The Daily
Teleg)-aph,
whose
this project.
enthusiastic
We
commitment has given
us
much encourage-
ment. American Airlines have provided valuable help in kind with transport
We
costs.
have benefited greatly from the expertise, advice and constructive suggestions
of a disinguished Ad\isor\' Committee.
Our greatest thanks, however, private collectors
on both
erously agreed to part with so exhibition.
owed
to the lenders, both public institutions
many outstanding works
and Australia,
who
and
have gen-
of art for the duration of the
We would particularly like to mention Mary Keough Lyman and her col-
leagues at the Universit}' of Iowa
Mural of 1943
We
are
sides of the Atlantic, in Japan
to be
shown
are grateful to
Museum
of .\rt,
who
have enabled Jackson Pollock's
in Cireat Britain for the first time.
Da .id Anfam who,
together with Gerti Fietzek, has contribut-
ed profound knowledge of the subject to the editing of this catalogue. C^lose
and constant collaboration berween the Royal Academv and the Zeitgeist-
we wish to thank members of the staff of both institutions, without whose unceasing work and unhesitating commitment it would ha\c iiecn imjK)ssiblc to realize this enterprise. Gesellschaft has enabled us to bring together the e.vhibition and
Sir
Rockr dk
G'ri y
KCA'O
President, Roval Acadciiu ot Arts
Acknowledgments
The Royal Academy and
the Zeitgeist-Gesellschaft wish to extend their warmest
thanks to the following: H. E.
The Honorable Raymond G. H. Seitz, Ambassador of YMlUam Acquavella, the late Thomas Ammann,
the United States of America,
Richard Armstrong, Heiner Bastian, Douglas Baxter, Neal Benezra, Drusilla Beyfus, Irving Blum, Jenny Bl\^, the late Castelli, Betty
Dominique Bozo, Marie-Puck Broodthaers, Leo
Churcher, Michel Cohen, James Corcoran, Jack Cowart, Philippe
Daverio, Susan Da\idson, Jeffrey Deitch, James Demetrion, Lisa Dennison, Anthony d'Offay,
Andrew Fabricant, Richard L. Feigen, Agnes Fielding, Konrad Fischer, MarRobert H. Frankel, Rudi Fuchs, Stephen Gangstead, Kate Ganz, Ivan
cel Fleiss,
Gaskell, Barbara Gladstone, Arnold B. Glimcher, Alichael Govan, Jan and Ronald
Greenberg, Karsten Greve, Anne d'Harnoncourt, Steven Harvxy, Antonio Barbara Jakobson, Hugues Joffre, Jasper Johns, Piet de Jonge,
Bill
Homem,
Katz, Tetsuo
Kawai, Ellsworth Kelly, Christian Klemm, John R. Lane, Tomas Llorens, Jorg Ludwig,
Edward McBride, Loic Malle, Jan van der Marck,
Silvia
Brice Marden,
Matthew Marks,
Menzel, Jorn xMerkert, Samuel Miller, Luc\' Mitchell-Innes, Charles Moffett,
F. Moore, Adriana and Robert Mnuchin, Francis Naumann, Sasha Newman, Ute and Reinhard Onnasch, Lord Palumbo, Count Giuseppe Panza di Biumo, Edmund Pillsbun-, Earl A. Powell III, Maria Price, Stephen Prokopoff, Emily and the late Joseph Pulitzer, Peter Raue, Urs Raussmiiller, Barr\' Rosen, Alark Rosenthal, Lawrence Rubin, Jennifer Russell, Charles Saatchi, Douglas Schultz, Ileana Sonnabend, Theodore Stebbins, Jr, Hans Strelow, Jeremy Strick, Charles Stuckey, Da\id Sylvester, Sarah Taggart, Alain Tarica, Lucien Treillard, Samuel L. Trower, xMaurice Tuchman, Paul Winkler, Daniel Wolf, Charles V\i-ight, Heribert Wuttke, Donald
Anne
Young, Louis A. Zona.
Exhibition Executive Committee Sir
Roger de Grey, President, Royal Academy of Arts
Academy Exhibitions Committee Academy of Arts Exhibitions Secretary, Royal Academy of Arts
Allen Jones, RA, Chairman, Royal Piers Rodgers, Secretar\", Royal
Norman
Rosenthal,
Christos
M. Joachimides,
Secretar\^ General, Zeitgeist-Gesellschaft
Simonetta Fraquelh, Curatorial Assistant, Royal Academy of Arts
Ruth Seabrook, Sponsorship Alanager, Royal Academy of Arts Katherine Jones, Press Officer, Royal
Academy of Arts
Claudia J. Kahn,\ice President, Corporate Public Relations Services, Merrill LvTich
&
Co., Inc.
Richard Spiegelberg, Executive Director of Corporate Communications, iMerrill
Nigel
Lynch Europe Limited Editor, Telegraph Magazine
Home,
Michele Marcus,
Kim
PR Consultant, The
Medhurst, Manager, Marketing Services
Secretatj
to the
,
Daily Telegraph
UK and Ireland, American Airlines
Committee: Annette Bradshaw
Exhibition Organization London:
Simonettta Fraquelli, Curatorial Assistant
Susan Thompson, Administrator Berlin:
Tina Aujesky, Administrator Karin Osbahr, Curatorial Assistant
Thomas
Biisch, Project
Co-ordinator
Jeanne Greenberg, Exhibition Assistant (New York)
Christos M.Joachimides
Wrenching America's Impulse Notes on Art
into Art
USA
in the
These things astonish
me beyond
words.
Wlliam Carlos \Mlliams
Art
is
produced by
a
succession of individuals expressing
themselves;
it is
not
Marcel
'American Art in the 20th Century'
is
an exhibition devised from
on an understanding of art and history
of progress.
a question
a
Duchamp
European
\'iew-
on this side of the Atlantic. It is a view through a telescope: perception is concentrated on essentials, and the result is not a broad panorama but a critical focus. At the same time, it is a retrospect - an attempt to learn lessons, to take up positions, to make value judgments, from the vantage-point of the end of the centurj^ point, based
Rather than to establish exhibition seeks to
open
a
a
that has taken shape
consensus or to achieve encyclopaedic completeness, this
way
debate on the
in
which the
art
of the
USA has
helped
to define both the appearance and the intellectual histor\^ of art in our centurj'. In
European
art all the
major innovative achievements - Cubism, Expressionism, Fauv-
ism, Suprematism, Dada, and
on
to Surrealism
- belong
opening decades of
to the
the century; the evolution of .American art has followed a reverse pattern. First there
lengthy period of incubation and exploration, marked by a
was
a
ing
artistic personalities:
from
Man Ray
Hopper, to Alexander Calder and Joseph Cornell. Then, 1940S, there
emerged
prevailing ideas of artistic debate,
a
art.
generation of artists
New
and very soon
number of outstand-
and Georgia O'Keeffe, by way of Edward
who
radically
in
New
York
in the
mid-
expanded and transformed
York now became the focus of it
had taken over from
Paris,
artistic production and which had been the uncon-
tested centre of the art world since the eighteenth centur\^ In a rapid succession of
- Abstract Expressionism, Neo-Dada, Pop Art, New Abstraction, Antiform, Conceptual Art - the art of the USA dominated the interna-
creative explosions
Minimal
Art,
tional art debate for a quarter of a century, until well into the 1970s. It
ments
in
American
art
during that quarter of
a centun,' that
define
is
develop-
its
essential
contribution to the art of our time.
Even before Marcel Duchamp shovel in a
actually arrived in
hardware store and wrote on
he was already
at the centre
Descending a Staircase (1912; Fig.
tions
and
activities, that
The Armory Show sizeable its
is
'In
art,
3, p.
snow-
(Cat. 18),
The enormous
his painting
Nude on
an active partisanship and orchestration of manifesta-
without parallel
kindled the
creative
Armory Show by
a
40) marks the onset of a personal influence
first
in
the entire histor\' of modernism.
public discourse on
group of both American and European
epoch-making
bought
1915,
Advance of the Broken .Arm'
at the 1913
legendary' significance stems wholly frotn
of the
New York in
of discussion there about the avant-garde.
impact - not to say scandal - created the evolution of American
it
developments
its
artists
European
in art since
modernism
in the
USA.
A
organized the exhibition, but section,
which was
a surx'ey
Impressionism. The turn-of-
the-century avant-garde was represented in force, by Henri Matisse and Pablo Picasso, Constantin Brancusi ami
Francis Picabia - and, not
least,
Wilhelm Lehmbruck,
by Duchamp.
\A^assily
Kandinsk}- and
Christ OS
lo
Duchamp's was to lead to
New York in ed the
M. Joachiimdes
a
unique and lifelong
artistic friendship
his first
ready-mades
museum
expressive resource of \isual
art,
of what
art
is
York,
Duchamp found-
of modern art in the USA.
by way of The Large Glass (1915-23; Fig.
(1915),
Duchamp
of this century has done, and
New
and creative collaboration. In
Etant donnes (1946-66), and to the introduction of language as
27), to
which
Ray, directly after his arrival in
1920, together with Katherine S. Dreier and iMan Ray,
Societe Anony?}ie, in effect the first
From
artist
Man
encounter with
first
at the
left his
mark on American
same time
can be. As Craig Adcock has put
radically
'The
it:
2, p.
formal and
art as
no other
changed the conception of the present day,
pluralistic art
characterized by strategies of appropriation and an
a
"amthing goes"
attitude,
would be unthinkable without Duchamp's example.'
The more
closely
we engage with American
polarit}- that exists
tion in the
within
work of
it,
The two
art.
art,
both in attitudes to faces of a
the
art
more
and
clearly
we
perceive the
in their concrete manifesta-
Janus - two phenomena that are funda-
mental to our understanding of America and also to America's understanding of itself- are reflected
One is
art
of this centun'.
of the poles can be described as an inward longing for the transcendental:
what Barnett
its
and formulated in American
Newman described
subhme'.
as 'the abstract
earliest artistic expression in landscape.
The
It is a
this
longing that finds
landscape paintings of the 1850s and
1860S by Frederic E. Church and Albert Bierstadt are surprising in their evocative
power; the formal counterpart of
this
power
lies in
the
artists'
use of large, mostly
horizontal formats. These imposing landscape paintings reflect the experience of an
untouched vastness that cosmos, settlers.
tion
as
acts as a
overwhelming
The
metaphor -
a parable,
landscape
as the real
itself
ideological impact of these paintings
is
even - for an overw^helming
must have been
echoed
to the earliest
in the title of an exhibi-
shown at The Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York some years
ican Paradise'. In the early tw^entieth century this pole of the
ago: 'Amer-
American experience
best represented by the formal language of the sublime in the
is
work of Georgia
O'Keeffe. In altered form, this concern with landscape played a part within the radical change to abstraction that took place in the 1940s. In the large canvases of Jackson Pollock,
and
later in the
powerful landscape abstractions of CKfford
Still, it
acquires a heroic,
pagan dimension. At the same time, the sublime, transcendental element resounds through the colour
fields
of Mark Rothko;
Newman and, with yet greater rigour, too, the
message
is
immaterial projection,
ican art
invoked in the stringent austerity of Here,
compellingly reinforced by the use of a large-sized canvas. Grad-
ually, abstraction freed itself
Turrell.
it is
in the 'Black' paintings of Ad Reinhardt.
from the
a light-filled
materialit}' of the painting
space -
as,
and turned into an
for instance, in the
work of James
This marks the conclusion, so far, of a process that has run through Amersince Church, disclosing - in a variety of idioms - the heritage of European
Romanticism.
The streets,
other face of Janus shows
itself in
Coca-Cola and Marlboro, pulp
the
realit\'
literature
of the big
cit\',
the dirt
on the
and sex - 'popular culture' -
or,
equally, in the isolation of human beings in the metropolis, as so tellingly captured in
among The Hopper and
the paintings of Hopper. Catastrophes and disasters, suicides and raw violence
the sk\'scrapers form the opposite pole to the metaphor of landscape as Elysium.
outstanding representatives of this early polarization are, respectively. O'Keeffe.
A minute observation of technological civilization and of the work of industn', a coolly h\^erbolic presentation of objects of use
of the
realists
of the 1920s. However,
of American art fully came into
took a
far
more
its
and united
it
to create highly personal codes
was not
until the 1950s that this
second pole
own, when Robert Rauschenberg and Jasper Johns
painterly approach,
sionist experience,
it
and
and consumption, marked the works
which had developed out of the Abstract Expres-
with elements drawn from the ever\'day emironment
and sjTnbols of urban culture.
Notes on Art
in the
USA
ii
From the early 1960s onwards, with Pop Art, artists such as Roy Lichtenstein and Andy Warhol took up the theme of city life, along with the fetishized common object, advertising and comic strips - a second-hand reality with which they also confronted
themes of war and violence. Their reality,
ment - the impartiality of and Mike Kelley.
The
strategy, that of a distanced appropriation of
has remained in use to this day, with an added extreme of analytical detachthe chronicler - in the works of, for example, Jeff
longing for an abstract apotheosis of
propriate
two
are the
it,
same
versions of the
faces of Janus.
Nor
reality,
at
and the urge to dissect and ap-
are these restricted to visual art. Parallel
American
polarity are to be found in
WTiitman's hymns to nature
Koons
one extreme and Williams
S.
literature,
with Walt
Burroughs's raw delin-
eations of outcasts and casualties at the other.
one of the purposes of this exhibition to
It is
of innovations.
something as
selection concentrates
essentially new, or at
endows
that
The
a
which he succeeds
Surrealists, but
Gerald
the Figure 5 in Gold
Murphy
are 'icons'
at
which the
artist
invents
in a specific act of concentration
with his pioneering works of the second decade of
Duchamp, he
the century, when, with Picabia and
Saw
the story of American art as a history
work with exemplary character. For instance, we do not show Man Ray
one of the Paris /
tell
on the moment
New York Dada.
initiated
by Charles Demuth (Cat.
45),
Razor or
Villa
America by
and Odol or Lucky Strike by Stuart Davis (Cat. 49, 50) of the 1920s, simultaneously magical and precise; they evoke an American
reality that
is
(Cat. 42, 43)
emblematic
in the extreme.
The New York
cityscapes of O'Keeffe and
Hopper, metaphors of isolation from the same period, complete an 'American Image of Life' that
first
cn^stalHzed at an early stage in American art of this centur\\ Alex-
ander Calder and Joseph Cornell are represented largely by their works of the 1930s,
which bear witness
to an original, creative dialogue with
European Surrealism.
We
of Abstract Expressionism in 1943, in such works as Arshile Gorky's Wateifall (Cat. 81) and Pollock's Mural and Guardians of the Seart (Cat. 86, present the
87),
first stirrings
which mark the
decisive breakthrough to a
de Kooning and Barnett
moment when
Newman
are also represented
own
each found his
new language of expression. Wlllem
unmistakable
by works of the 1940s, the
st\de (see Cat. 95, 107).
Almost
all
the other w^orks that give voice to this historic upheaval stem fi^om the 1950s, the
decade in which their
mark on
Still,
Rothko, Reinhardt, Franz Kline and
is
Francis decisively set
the image of Abstract Expressionism.
new substance
Again, the great shift that infused reality
Sam
moment
captured at the
Robert Rauschenberg,
Ujititled
of
its
into
American
art's
The
genesis: in the 1950s.
dialogue with
early
works of
{Red Painting) or Pink Door {Qzt. 135, 136), like Jasper
Johns's Target and White Numbers (Cat. 146, 147), combine subjective painterliness
with objects from daily
life (a
combination introduces principle,
a
new
conveyed through
a
door, a
window
experience of
frame, a clock,
realit\',
a
cup, a chair). This
based on the Dadaist collage
highly personal artistic language of great evocative
force.
The that of
1950s brought
Cy Twombly,
a
number of different answers
to Action Painting: for example,
with his unique sign language of scripts from
imagination, of ciphers that encode
a
poetic cosmos, as in Free
a journal
that of the new, radical abstraction in Ellsworth Kelly's Black, Tiro Hljites and
Two Blacks (Cat. 130, 131) or Frank and Squalor (Cat. 153, 155).
A
Stella's 'Die
and
lil.vte.
Fahne Hoch!' and Maniage of Reason
decisive turning-point in the evolution oi the
American
came at makes its comments
attitude to art
the onset of the 1960s, with the emergence of Pop Art, an art that --^
of the
IVl.^eeler (C-At. 142);
on everyday events and experiences with a cool detachment and an ostensibly impersonal imager)' marked by an alienating appropriation of the formal principles of commercial design. lere, again, we have tried to capture the w ;n it all began, through works by Claes Oldenburg, Roy Lichtenstein, Andy Warhol and Richard Artschwa1
ger,
almost everv one ot which dates from
this earl\- period.
12
Christos
From of their
the first
M. Joach'nnides
same decade, we show two
different artistic approaches at the
moment
appearance: the sculptures of Minimal Art, in which Donald Judd, Carl
Andre and Dan Flavin were developing an art that took over and redefined space, and the work of such artists as Eva Hesse, Richard Serra and Bruce Nauman, who worked with the spontaneous, unmediated human reaction to materials, objects and visions and put their own
existential experiences into
senting developments since the the
moment of their genesis.
In
throughout, been to trace the
late 1970s fact,
new, radical forms of sculpture. In pre-
we have, once
again, attempted to pinpoint
the guiding principle behind this exhibition has,
artistic
process to
its
inception.
Norman
Rosenthal
American
A View From Europe
Art:
Max Ernst, arts
around 1950, speaking
New York City said
Street in
at the Arts
Club on Eighth
that significant changes in the
formerly occurred every three hundred years whereas
now
they take place even,' twent)' minutes. John Cage'
The
evidence
lies in
the paintings and sculptures produced in America during this
century: 1943 was the year of parthenogenesis. In a
works of the European
artists in
be threatening to take over the
many
America,
New
York
way
it
was
a
art world.
response to the
who
of them refugees,
appeared to
They were on show
at Pegg\'
end of 1942 - Picasso, Max Ernst, Piet Mondrian, Marcel Duchamp, Giorgio de Chirico, Joan Miro, Kasimir Malevich,
Guggenheim's Art of This Century Gallery
at the
Alexander Archipenko, Alberto Giacometti, Paul Klee, Jacques Lipchitz, Amedee Ozenfant, Yves Tanguy, Ben Nicholson.
The
exhibition excluded Americans, with the
exception of the virtually honorary European, Alexander Calder. There were other big
names
in
New
York
With
Salvador Dali, Fernand Leger, Andre Masson, Andre Breton, the high priest of Surrealist orthodoxy.
at the time:
Roberto Matta and, above
all,
the exception of Matta, they generally kept to themselves, partiy for linguistic
reasons and partiy because they regarded most American
artists as provincial cousins.
art had had many previous injections from Europe, most famously the Armory Show, but America in 1943 still felt like a young country^ in ever\' cul-
American 1913
tural sense; ambitious certainly, but deeply conscious of its provinciality and, in the
Thomas Hart Benton and Grant Wood, defiantiy so. The possibilopened up by the Armory Show were immediately curtailed by the First World
case of artists like ities
War, but
a
major impact was made
from
Paris,
where
York, where
it
it
had been
in the
person of Duchamp.
by sending Nude Descending a
as a significant cultural figure
a little-noticed,
Cezanne, Picasso and Matisse, collectors, little attention
all
invented himself
marginal Cubo-Futurist work, to
became the modernist painting par
bringing of news from Europe to
He
Staircase (Fig. 3, p. 40)
New York in whom were
of
was paid to indigenous
excellence.
Ultimately,
the form of
New
beyond the
work by Van Gogh,
avidly acquired
by the discerning
artists.
Alfred Stieglitz, a photographer, working in a field in which .\merica had always
been highly innovative, even extraordinary, and in which
own
with
its
it
could effordessly hold
its
transatlantic counterparts, for a short time ran a gallerv^ called 291 that
showed such painters
as
Arthur Dove, Marsden Hartley, John Marin and, above
Georgia O'Keeffe
(see Cat. 1-3, 33-41).
York, and none at
all
in
But
artists like
these had few oudets in
Europe, where reputations had to be made. Only
all,
New
Man Ray
and Calder were to integrate themselves successfully into the contemporary' Euro-
pean
art world, the hierarchy
of which in the 1920s was largely determined on the
Boulevard Montparnasse in Paris. In 1928 the
New
York Times announced, presum-
ably having received the press release from Stieglitz himself: 'Artist love, gets
$25,000 tor
six panels.' It
apparently bought by
a
involving 'the biggest
sum
French
was referring to
collector. It
of furdicr works by the 1
2
A
London, 1968, p. 30. (TKeeffc anJ Sticglitz: An
Year from Monday,
See Benita F.isler, American Ro?nancc,
New
York, 1991, p. 370.
place in the
was not
ever paid for so small
present day American', was revealed as artist.'
a
hoax on
O'Keeffe 's work
European consciousness of
six
art; as
a
paints for
until 1991 that this purchase,
group of
modem
Stieglitz's part to
at its best it is,
who
flower paintings by O'Keeffe,
paintings by a
encourage the
might have found
a
sale
proper
c\en today there are practically
no works by her or her contemporaries - Dove, Stuart Davis, Charles Dennith.
Noivnaii Rosenthal
14
Charles Sheeler (see Cat. 44-54) -in the leading museums and collections in Europe. The career of John Covert, whose few surviving works show him to have
been
at least as imaginative
an
years' involvement in the circle of
abandoned
art in 1923 to
become
more famous Dove,
the far
artist as
paradigm of the situation in America
is
perhaps
in the first decades of this century. After a
Duchamp, Man Ray and a travelling
New York Dada,
a
few
Covert
salesman in California, where he died
in obscurit}' in i960.
After Stieglitz, the next heroic attempt to invent an American art was
made by
Franklin D. Roosevelt's government as part of its New^ Deal polic}' in response to the
The WTA (V^'orks Progress Administration) was established to patronize - hundreds of them - by providing them with commissions for, among other things, murals in schools, aerodromes, post offices, railway stations and any number Depression.
artists
of other public buildings. WTien, in 1942, the United States entered the war, Roose-
Many of the
murals
were covered up and thousands of easel paintings were removed from public
institu-
\^TA,
velt gave the
own
in his
words, 'an honorable discharge'.
many to be destroyed. Most were paintings that illustrated aspects of the American way of life, though abstract works had also been commissioned. It was an tions,
extraordinary episode in the histor\^ of American art - the United States potentially imitating the early years of Russian Soviet society but,
El
Lissitzk)^,
lasting
no sense of innovation except
and most worthwhile legacy of the
alas,
there was
no AIale\ach or
in the field of photography, ultimately the
WTA.
By the end of 1942 the predicament of art in America must have seemed desperate. Europe was destroyed, and artistically exhausted, yet the 'degenerate' artists fi"om that continent were arrogandy asserting their moral and artistic superiority in the happened that it was at this very moment, just when all seemed lost, that Jackson Pollock produced his first real masterpieces, destined to reopen the territor\' of l^'estern art. In 1943 he created such epoch-making paintings as The SheUnited
States. It just
IVolf (Fig.
i),
Pasiphae (iMetropolitan
Museum
of Art,
New
York), Guardians of the
Secret (Cat. 87) and Mural (Cat. 86) - works that were to suggest endless possibilities for the language of the visual arts, as he himself undoubtedly believed they would.
These amazing
pictures, beautiful in their aggressive crudity; at
once primitive and
culturally highly informed, with their totemic references to Egyptian,
American Indian cultures heavily encrusted ;
like a
Roman and
Byzantine iconostasis, were unlike
an\T:hing seen in painting since Picasso's Demioiselles d'Avignon of 1907 (in
New York's
Museum
of Alodern art since 1934), and the great 1913 compositions of W^assily Kandinsk}'^, on show in New York at Solomon Guggenheim's Museum of Non-Objec-
where Pollock had worked for a short time as a security guard. These works by the American went beyond the innovations of Picasso and Kandinsky in a very profound sense. If Picasso fractured the figure, making it visible from a number of different viewpoints, and Kandinsky attempted in a Utopian manner to enter the spirit. Pollock contrived with his painting to get under his own skin, inside
tive Painting,
his
own
brain,
and attempted to describe
his
own
personal and cultural anguish, even
Fig.
I
Jackson Pollock, The She-Wolf, 1943. of Modem Art, New York;
The Museum
Purchase, 82.44
Roberto Matta, Invasion of the Night, 194 1. San Francisco Museum of Art; Bequest of Jacqueline-Marie Onslow Ford Fig. 2
A \^ew
to celebrate a personal abyss in a
way
that art since the Renaissance had, in
to describe the outside world, consciously avoided.
of the 1950s
who was
countless American
Remus - the Romulus
metaphor
virgins. It
search
and the feasting that in great secrecy to
these festivals, perhaps, that Guardiaiis of
is
which
celebrating, a painting
its
New York poet
myth of Romulus and
New York,
for
honor of the god Consus, held
established there 'in
is
a
if
of Modern Art and the friend of
describes Pollock's interest in the
Rome, perhaps
which were borne kidnapped the Secret
Frank O'Hara, the
The Museum
also a curator at
artists,
birth of
from Europe
a
is
marvel of spatial confinement and pas-
sionate formalism, formalism brought to the point of Expressionistic defensiveness.''
Mural, Pollock's largest canvas, painted for Peggy Guggenheim's apartment in one
months of staring at the empt\' canvas, was interpreted by O'Hara bacchanalian festival attending this resolution, imbued as it is with the abstract ardor of the images in the other paintings of this group'.-* But Mural can equally confrenzied night after as 'the
vincingly be read as an endless, wide-screened forest of Indian totem poles or a heavy
No
stampede of buffalo driving across the plains of middle America. created in America could compare with
it
veritable Rite of Spring of American
even
ence either to cheer
it
art,'
on or to drown
in
if at
it is
the
no public audipeer group - W^il-
that time there was
But Pollock's
in catcalls.
it
painting ever
raw energy. As has been noted,
lem de Kooning, Arshile Gorky, Robert Motherwell, Barnett Newman, Mark Rothko, Clyfford Still and the others - knew, and they could do nothing but accept It was too large by eight inches to fit into Peggy Guggenheim's apartment; under Duchamp's supervision eight inches were cut off
the challenge of the painting itself
one end, and shortly after the war the work was given to the University of Iowa Art Museum, far fi-om the madding art crowd. From 1943 through to the early 1950s the Action Painters, as they were christened by Harold Rosenberg, or Abstract Expressionists, Greenberg, each in
his
own way and
at his
own
were called by Clement
as they
made
pace
a significant
contribution
Without a trace of irony, except perhaps in the case of de Kooning, and responding in no small part to the political realities of the time - the War, the Holocaust in Europe, the apparent threat of imminent world destruction by the atomic bomb, the conservative reaction in America (McCarthy), even the intensified hurly-burly of city life - each retreated into contemporary language of
to the reinvention of the
a
hermetic
stylistic
cosmos
to
make
a
statement of his
art.
own
in painting
about
this
new
world. At this time any sense of banality in art was rejected; in the cases of Pollock
and Rothko
art
it led ultimately to more or less premedwhose paintings became translations of the subabstract forms - rocky landscapes, with metamorphic
was so deadly serious that
itated self-destruction.
By 1952
Still,
American space into as if by a prehistoric race of giants - was able to write how 'we are now committed to an unqualified act not illustrating outworn myths or contemporary- alilimity of
forms created
bis.
Each must accept
ment of each of
total responsibility for
the abstract painters.
Ad
what he
executes'.''
This was the achieve-
Reinhardt, who, with his black square
paintings of the late 1950s and their conscious reference to Malevich and Suprematism, arrived at
what he termed
anticipated 'painting that
is
'timeless' art (see Cat. 125),
not illustration, not pictures of fat
premonition of the late Philip Guston] or pictures at a 3
O'llnri, jfiickson Pollock,
New York,
man
p. 18.
his
Ibid.
5
David Anfani, Abstract Expression Lmi, London,
1990, p. 100. 6 Quoted in Alfred H. Barr Jr.s introduction to
The Neu^ Arnerican Pahitmg, the catalog'ue of the international travelling exhibition of that
name organized by /Vrt in
he
Museum
of
Modern
New
CJallery,
7
1
York and shown at the Tate London, in I-'ebruary and March
with scenery, but
a
man
in love
own
1943 already
An artist said:
a painter
is
[a
not
with painting.'" F.ach artist had
agenda, or rather subject-matter. Rothko arrived at his mature st\de around
1949-50 with
his translucent veils
cosmic experiences that
relate
of thinly applied colour suggestive of quite specific
both to dissolution and death but which none the
less
require from the viewer a conscious empathetic effort to complete the effect (see Cat. 1
13-18).
Not for nothing were his final
Seagram Building,
New
cycles of paintings
-
for example, those for the
York, and in the Rothko (>hapel in
meditative environments in which the beholder nuist
1959.
him- or herself Rothko's paintings,
Reinhardt, lecture of 194?, in Barbara Rose, Ait-as-An: The Selected Writings of Ad
periences, yet always relevant to his time.
Reinhiirdt, Berkeley, 1991, p. 47.
ings-
ed.,
in
with big cigars
A formalist interpretation of the painting ot this time is not helpful.
1959,
4
in love
all.
had
men
Oru'/nent, Cathi-dni,
like
those ol
The
first
lose
Newman, titles
Houston - conceived
as
and then rediscover
are quasi-religious ex-
of Newman's
own
paint-
Shinnncr Bright, The Promise, Oiitciy and, fmalK', Stations of
Norman
i6
Rosenthal
P>w>..y>tfn'to.*
- translate metaphors of Judeo-Christian belief into
Croj-j-
/^/7f
contemporan,' painting.
bound
They were intended
the works into the
between
modern
w
European
new
kind
of
to act as an aid to the \iewer, but also
art tradition, so
long concerned with conflicts
Newman
believed that the evolution of
the sublime and renewal.
reality,
a
Fig. 3
Jackson Pollock, Xumbe?-
The Museum of Modem
Europe
art
1948.
Fig.
4
Robert Rauschenberg, Charlene, 1954.
Museum,
.•\msterdam
had been so preoccupied with questions
in previous centuries
of beaut}' that the essence of
1,
New York;
Purchase, 77.50
Stedelijk
art in
Art,
was somehow demeaned. As he wrote
famous
in a
essay in the magazine The Tigers Eye in 1948, just as he was about to find his true st\4e
with the Here
first
of his One?nent paintings (see Fig.
in America,
some of
us, free
8, p. 90):
from the weight of European
culture, are finding the answer,
completely denying that art has any concern with the problem of beauty and where to find
by
We are
it
freeing ourselves of the impediments of memory, association, nostalgia, legend, myth, or what have you,
European
that have been the devices of \\'estem
man or
'life',
we
are
painting. Instead of
making [them] out of ourselves, out of our own
making
feelings.
cathedrals out of Christ,
The image we produce
is
who
at
the self-evident one of revelation, real and concrete, that can be understood by anyone it
vnll
look
without the nostalgic glasses of historv."
This
effort of
Newman's, and indeed of
all
his great contemporaries, to
from the European tradition was heroic but like
in part, as indicated
break away
by the ethos of titles
those quoted above, ultimately doomed.
It
was incredibly hard for these
artists to
break free of Europe, dependant
had been for so long on Cubist or Surrealist modes of making
art.
as
they
Gorky, born in
1904, was almost fort\^ years old before he found his authentic voice during the last five years
of his
with works
life
like Watetfall (Cat. 81), after
having progressed
through Fau\asm and variations on Picasso's themes. Arguably, he never emancipated himself completely from Surrealism, though largely with the help of xVIatta (see Eig.
from Paris
in 1939,
the end of his
he created
life finally
European models. With until
1949-50
we have
his
own
first
who came
to
New York
transcendent, technique that at
feeling rather than reliance
de Kooning, Rothko,
argued,
American contemporaries,
the Chilean artist
a personal, ultimately
demonstrated
Still,
his
Newman
that they succeeded in jettisoning their
Pollock, who, as lighter, less
2),
among
and others
it
upon
was not
European baggage; even
achieved maturity around 1943, developed a
anguished freedom with the legendary works of 1948-50, such as
Num-
3), Autumn Rhythm (Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York), Lavender Mist (National Gallery of Art, Washington) and Number 2 (Cat. 89). For most critics,
ber I (Fig.
these paintings represent the pinnacle of Pollock's achievement, and they are indeed extraordinarv^, strangely elusive, highly individual
and with the utmost
authenticit}'
works that render
in great detail,
and refinement, states of mind and nervous spatial body - filigree-Hke X-rays of the mind, body,
energies both within and without the
psyche and
sex, free
be with these works
of inhibition yet totally precise in their delineation of mood. To is
to be in the presence of the artist in a ver\" particular way.
8 Xev\-man, 'The Sublime
is
Now'
(1948),
reprinted in David and Cecile Shapiro, eds.. Abstract Kxpressionisvi:
A
Cntical Record,
Cambridge, AL\, 1990, p. 328. 9 Rosenberg, 'The .\merican Action Painters' (1952), reprinted in Shapiro, op.
cit.,
pp.
75-85ID O'Hara, 'Cy Twombly at Stable Gallery', ^rf7;eii'5, January 1955, p-57-
A Mew from Europe If
1943 was the
first
Rosenberg described "Marxists"
it
moment
big
in
American
art,
1950 was the second. Harold
in an article published in 1952:
(WPA unions,
artists
'many of the painters were
congresses) - they had been trying to paint Society.
Others had been trying to paint Art (Cubism, Post-Impressionism) the same thing
The
— The
moment came when it was decided to paint.
big
on the canvas was
gesture
17
.
of liberation, fi-om Value -
a gesture
amounts
it
to
.Just To Paint.
.
political, aes-
thetic, moral.'" It
had taken
tween
just
seven years for
existential anxiety that
and
artists
critics to
reach this point. Caught be-
dominated aesthetic thinking on both
sides of the
Atlantic and attitudes of an almost pragmatic matter-of-factness in the face of the
complexities of the American predicament, the American painters worked alone,
whether
in
New York or elsewhere, yet bound to one another by affinity as well as by
the critical context. Their philosophy tied
them
to Europe; the originality of their
matter-of-fact attitudes and sense of scale, appropriate to their situation, was uniquely
American. This
latter,
Newman claimed, was
their first priority,
of American art
lay. It
was certainly not long
in
It
was, in
artists
fact,
and there the future
coming.
almost simultaneously invoked by the next generation of American
- figures such
as Ellsworth Kelly,
Robert Rauschenberg,
Cy Tw'ombly and Jas-
per Johns (see Cat. 132-52). As early as 1951 Kelly, living in Paris after having been
Europe
stationed in
as a
young GI, produced
mature works, and Rau-
his first
schenberg, born in 1925, just two years later than Kelly, created his
own radical
black-
and-white paintings and exhibited them
at the Betty Parsons Gallery, where only
three seasons earlier Pollock had held his
first
epoch-making exhibition.
Nineteen-forty-nine to 1952 were the legendary years of Black Mountain College,
where John Cage, Rauschenberg and Twombly came together. Rauschenberg was
to
Museum of of Newman,
create seemingly anarchic works, such as Charlene (Fig. 4) and Bed (1955;
Modern
Art,
New York),
at a
when many of the
time
greatest canvases
Rothko and even Pollock himself had either just been, or were about to be, painted. Twombly invented his own graphic and painterly methods which, as early as 1955, were described by Frank O'Hara as 'drawn, scratched and crayoned over and under the surface with as much attention to aesthetic tremors as to artistic excitement'. " Johns's earliest visual statements of fact date from around 1954, the time of Still,
his first Flag.
The
reaction to Abstract Expressionism was fast and furious, and might almost be
regarded
as the
other side of the same coin: one generation pitting
other in the same boxing ring, as activity in
artists
such as
itself against
were. This untidy concurrence of diverse
America continued throughout the
which period well as
it
an-
artistic
1950s and early 1960s, during
late
Roy Lichtenstein, Andy Warhol and Claes Oldenburg,
as
Jim Dine, Edward Kienholz, James Rosenquist and George Segal, quickly own canons of factuality, which Newman had so precisely defined as
established their
the
way forward
for
American
art.
But by now it was not only the facts of the sublime, - its mountains and endless plains, as well
abstract definitions of the space of America as its skyscrapers
street
life,
looking up towards infinity - but rather the facts of the trash of
blatant sexuality, instantaneous imagery
and advertising that became part of the time perceived, perhaps even by the
reality
The spite
in the
The
resulting works, for a short
artists, as a rebellion,
the language of Abstract Expressionism,
seemed capable of reaching
drawn from comics, newspapers
of art.
it
United
political threats to the nation's well-being,
New York in
particular, in
from Korea to Metnam, encour-
first
time the development ot
duction and the entire infrastructure of the art world industr\' centred on
''
to
a real market lor contemporar\' art. Dozens sprang up by the 1980s there were hundreds - and the artists, their pro-
aged for the of galleries
homage
States.
increasing prosperity of post-war America, and of
of
ultimately paid
only by virtue of the grand scale that art
servicing an apparently insatiable
demand. WTiereas
there had been virtually no
contemporary American
call for
in the first half art
of
New
this
York,
centuiy
(throughout the 1920s
and 193US Old Masters and Impressionist works of art had poured into American collections from Europe), suddenly the countr\' opened itself to a new perspective in
1
8
Nonnan
Rosenthal
which the past counted
for ven- Httle
and contemporaneit\- was
Abstract Expressionism seemed old-fashioned and, ten years
could be regarded as Old Masters belonging to a myiJiical ever, that
they were ver\'
much
part of the present,
further transformation in the works of both the
all.
By
the mid-1960s
later, its
past.
The
practitioners
truth was,
which was about
to
\\o\\--
undergo
a
Minimal and the post-Minimal
artists.
This new group worked without
of irony -
a trace
if
anything, with an increased
seriousness, and a heightened awareness of the sublime effects that could be achieved
through simple matter-of-factness. cast metal or
welded assemblage
Xow using transformed sculptural material - not
(as in
the case of David Smith and
Mark di
Suvero),
but rather simple everyday, industrial materials often presented serially - they redis-
covered in a decisive way the potential of sculptural space. Ultimately, a further
this
was only
consequence of the moves that had been made in the second half of the
1940s and were still being made, in particular, by Newman and Rothko, who in the meantime had \-irtually become Minimahst artists themselves. Donald Judd, Carl Andre, Sol Le\Mtt, Dan Flavin and Walter De Maria ignored painting (see Cat. 201-10), but within a given area, using steel, bricks, glass, light tubes, their also
works evoke spaces defined not only by
by Reinhardt
(see Cat. 123-5).
^^^
abandoned, and Agnes Martin, Frank
Robert Mangold
(see Cat. 153-5,
artists is to
fluorescent
and Rothko, but
canvas as a field for action was by no means Stella,
193-200)
all
Robert R}Tnan, Brice Marden and contributed in their different ways to
extending the language invented barely two decades
Each of these
ph^ood and
Newman
earlier.
be understood as part of
kaleidoscope of strategies
a
which, born in 1943, achieved their first artistic expression around 1950. Suddenly, there was scope for endless invention, a struggle for ever greater purity based on an
on the materialit}' of the ever\^day. By this time similar movements were springing up in Europe, where, on the whole, Minimal Art received a more favourable public response than in America; but in Europe such strategies were surrounded by more complex and ambiguous cosmologies, as in the case of, say, Joseph Beuys, Jannis Koimellis, Richard Long and Mario Merz. It could certainly be maintained, however, that an American sense of scale had been absorbed fully by the European avant-garde. -Another related group of sculptors, including Eva Hesse, Bruce Nauman and Richard Serra (see Cat. 211-20), followed two seasons later on the heels of the Alinapparent formalism
imalists
that, nevertheless, justified itself
by
and turned the aesthetic upside-down, advancing
tions first adopted
by Pollock and Newman
in the 1940s
its
still
intense focus
further aspects of posi-
and 1950s. Serra, even to
this
day, can be appreciated as an Abstract Expressionist sculptor of heroic ambition (see
Fig. 5)-
Fig. 5
Richard Serra, Running Arcs (For John
Cage). Installation in the
Kunstsammlung
Xordrhein-W'estfalen, Diisseldorf, 1992
A Mew from Recent theories of
19
at some time in the mid-1970s in the breakdown in modernism occurred, perhaps similar to which almost took place in Europe at the end of the 1930s, resulting in a kalei-
United States and that
Europe
have suggested that
art
Europe
in
a
doscopic, multi-layered attitude to st\de.
The
essence of this
tened 'post-modernism', was held to be appropriation
nothing similar had happened before in the
history^
new approach,
(st\ listic theft)
of art.
-
as
chris-
though
The unprecedented
extent
of the appropriation has admittedly made post-modernism fundamentally different
from comparable phenomena in the history of art. The explosion of the art market on both sides of the Atlantic in the late 1970s surpassed amTdiing experienced even in the 1960s and found
rendering
difficult to
tional outsider, appeared to
almost became the
New York. It caused immense confusion, make aesthetic judgments. The artist, the tradihave moved to the centre; the sub-culture position
perfect expression in
its
more
ever
it
norm
;
the poHtics of deconstruction affected not only art
but also the consumers of that
art.
sibly anti-elitist positions, with
market mechanisms alone (certainly not
The 'new
determining hierarchies. critics as
art that
painting' of the early 1980s, perceived by
attempted to decode - or rather re-code, for
relating to race, gender, sexuality
saw - and sees -
remains
art at its best
hermetic
a
arts.
Problems
and dispossessed groups became the subject-matter
itself as
an equal partner in the dialogue. (That
the swift communication permitted by
and those involved with
ago should not be forgotten.) larly
some
Discussion no longer centred exclusively on America: Western Europe
art.
artists
art criticism)
anti-modernist, was rapidly replaced by post-modernist, media-orientated
language - patterns of creativity within the various areas of the \asual of
itself,
Aesthetics were increasingly informed by osten-
art cross the ^Atlantic
The
That America, and
is
partly the result of
the ease with which
compared
to even tw'enty years
stock exchange of art ideas and art goods, particu-
during the 1980s, was almost
where easy money was
modern technologv:
ever\'A\^here
certainly in those areas of the world
;
hand.
at
New York in
particular,
is
the focus for the culture of our last
WTien Leo and Gertrude Stein, John Quinn, the Arensbergs, Katherine Dreier and any number of other committed modernist collectors - far more committed, incidentally, than their European contemporaries - made their way to Europe they were preparing the ground for the future success of American art. Gertrude Stein, writing about Picasso in France just before the Second \\brld War and not really in touch with the New York art scene, remarked: half-centur\' cannot be disputed.
I
knew
that a creator
do not yet know as
it,
is
contemporar\', he understands what
but he
no one has ever seen
it,
in the twentieth centur)' its
own and
Picasso
is
is
the earth has a splendor that
it
when
the contemporaries
a centun,-
which sees the earth
contemporan,-
contemporar\- and as the twentieth centun,-
is
is
never has had, and as ever\thing destroys
and nothing continues, so then the twentieth cenmr\- has
of this century, he has that strange
qualit\-
a
itself
splendor which
is
of an earth that one has never seen and
of things destroyed as they have never been destroyed."
Whether Gertrude Stein would have understood Pollock is perhaps beside the point, but there were a number of Americans on both sides of the Atlantic, particularly in New York, who did comprehend the liberating possibilities of that new art. Ultimately, Pollock freed art
itself,
rather than
appreciation, from purely local con-
its
he was going against the grain and, unhke the
cerns. In this
Stieglitz circle,
earlier artists
of the
he did so successfully. In one of his rare public statements Pollock said
that 'the idea of an isolated .American painting, so popular in this countr\' during the thirties,
atics
or
seems absurd to
me
just as the idea
of creating
if it did, it
would solve
itself:
an American
is
Selden Rodman, Conversations with
New
contemporary
New York, 193% p. 50.
Stein, Picasso,
12
\'ork, 1957,
quoted
Artists,
New
1967. P- 73-
York,
Museum
of Modern
painting are independent of any
Shortly before he died in
May
all
it
one
or not, but the basic problems of country'.'"
1956 Pollock gave an inten-iew.
He
cared
little
for
the term Abstract Expressionism and even less for the terms non-objective and non-
in Francis
v. (.y Connor, Jackson Pollock, exhibition cata-
logue.
American mathem-
an American and his painting would
naturally be qualified by that fact whether he wills 11
a purely
or physics would seem absurd... in another sense the problem doesn't exist at
.\rt,
representational. time... but
when
'I
am
vcr\-
representational
\'ou are painting
some of
the time and a
little all
the
out of your unconscious, figures arc bound to
Norman
20
Rosenthal
emerge... painting paints
what he
is
a state
of being... painting
is
self-discovery.
Every good
artist
13
14
Of course,
artists, but with Pollock there is a difference. His where things became possible that were not possible before. Pollock's paintings have sculptural, emironmental, theatrical and temporal implications that no previous painting had possessed. The ideas of chance, of inherent self-destruction and of art occupying areas of real life were extended way
art
Pollock, radio interview with William
Wright, is.'"
this is true
broke through into
of all great
a
new
in
O'Connor, op. cit.,
De Kooning on Autumn
1967, reprinted in Shapiro, op.
15
Grohmarm, 'Die neue amerikanische Da- Tagesspiegel September 1958.
Malerei', 7
attitude as
much as an}^ing else art
from
scious of the fact that
The
quickly.
that enabled Pollock, at the age of thirty-one, to cut
European shackles and run loose. He was more or less conthis was an act of will on his part his own generation followed
its
;
time was right, the market was right, and
after 1945 the
American way should become the
tecture, popular music, advertising
and the manner of his death, but
became
ever\' bit as
much
a role
and
role
it was perhaps inevitable that model in art as much as in archi-
film. Pollock,
not only because of his
life st\de
also because of the aesthetic qualities of his painting,
model
as James
Dean
or Jack Kerouac, and
it
did not
take long for that message to reach Europe. In 1958 and 1959 an exhibition entitied
'The New^ American Painting' made International Council of the
German
a
Museum
triumphant tour of Europe, organized by the of Modern Art. W^ll Grohmann, the doyen of
more than the originator of the movement. Standing in front of his tremendous canvases one does not think of styles and slogans, but only of talent and singularity. Here is reality not of yesterday but of art critics,
wrote
at the time: 'Pollock is
tomorrow... an exuberance of the continent, the oceans and the
forests, the
con-
when
ceiving of an undiscovered world comparable to the time 300 years ago
the
pioneers came to his country.''' In 1958 memories of the horrors of the Second \\'orld
Europe,
as
years that
was the optimism of the American Dream
dream has become
to earth again.
War were
in the
United
tarnished, to say the least, and
The development
period reflects that process as well
still
ver\" real in
States.
Over the
America brought down
of the country's art over a comparatively short as, if
not better than, any other branch of cultural
Rauschenberg's Canyon of 1959 (Cat. 137), showing the American eagle with a weight suspended from it, demonstrates how quickly this self-critical awareness activity.
evolved.
By the
mid-sLxties an acutely self-referential process was already taking place
within the \isual
arts,
assuming
a
Holzer exhorts us with 'Truisms' want', she
is
thousand different shapes and
styles.
(see Cat. 240), such as 'Protect
giving expression to Pollock's
own
ambition for modern
'nothing more than the contemporary^ aims of the age that we're living
per Johns's Target (Cat. 147) to Keith Haring's
de Kooning's
Woman F(Cat.
graffiti
V\Tien Jenny
me from what
I
art,
which was
in'.'*
From Jas-
paintings (Cat. 235, 236); from
98) and Warhol's car crash paintings (Cat. 189) to Julian
Schnabel's Hospital Patio (Cat. 231); from Frank Stella's Marriage of Reason and Squalor (Cat. 155)
and Bruce Nauman's Green Light Cotridor (Cat. 216) to Robert Gober's
Untitled, Closet (Cat. 251)
and Cindy Sherman's
self-portraits (Cat. 242-5), there
be no doubt about the contemporaneity of American the here and now.
The
art, its
can
endless obsession with
selection of works presented in this exhibition
and the accom-
panying catalogue attempts to document some of the more exalted expressions of that
most legitimate concern of art. Viewed from Europe panting for breath.
this perspective,
America
still
has art in
(Berlin),
and February 1944, reprinted in
16 Pollock, inter\iew published in Arts
Architecture,
American
cit.,
pp. 372-4.
field
beyond Dada and Surrealism. Pollock, noted de Kooning, was like a cowboy,'^ and indeed his Clint Eastwood-like behaviour is amply documented. Perhaps it was this
p. 79.
Pollock, Partisan Rrcieiv,
O'Cormor, op. cit.,
p. 33.
Aithiir C. Danto
Philosophizing American Art
The Triumph of the Nrcv York School (i^S^; Fig. i), by the post-modern American masMark Tansey, is a droll and wily allegory^ of a shift in the cultural geography of
ter
modern
whereby New York replaced
art,
Paris as the artistic centre of the world. Tan-
sey shows the leaders of both schools in battle garb, taking the term 'avant-garde' in
monochrome, rotogravoire took place. Andre Breton, for
military sense, and depicts the surrender in a
its literal
document something
style that appears to
the French,
is
that really
ceding victory to Clement Greenberg, leader of the American forces.
Each signatory is flanked by his own set of champions: Pablo Picasso, Henri Matisse, Joan Miro and others for the Parisians; Jackson Pollock, V^^llem de Kooning, Robert Motherw^ell and others for the Yanks. The work becomes richly comical when we observe the French in vintage uniforms of the First World War, while the Americans
wear those of the Second World War. Picasso swaggers
in the fur coat of a flying ace,
doubtless alluding to the fact that he and Georges Braque addressed one another as
Wilbur and thought of the invention of Cubism as parallel to the conquest of the air in those rickety planes that Tansey once said reminded him of nothOrville and
much as
ing so
details. cally,
Cubist compositions.
The painting is dense with sly jokes and pungent
But the sharpest comment of
everything for which the
New
all is
the
way
the painting subverts, systemati-
York School stood:
it is
representational rather
upon by Greenberg
mark of
than abstract;
it
modernism
has nothing to do with the physicalit}' of paint or the urgenc}' of the
drip;
it is
lectual
-
;
it
repudiates the 'flatness' seized
witt)' instead
a label
as the
of grandiose; and Tansey clearly presents himself as an intel-
with which Motherwell was so imcomfortable that he had to apolo-
gize for not being
what he described
York School turned out to be ism, rather than the st\4e
war
a local
to
end
as 'a feeling imbecile'.
engagement all style
The triumph
of the
in the sinuous histor\' of
wars.
And
the fact that Tansey 's paint-
ing was even possible suggests that the doctrines and ideologies of the
School had long been overridden. Ever\thmg
is
New
modern-
New
put in a distant historical
York
light,
one
which the art of Paris and that of New York were far less opposed than may have seemed the case - a light so distant that the two world wars become a single confused
in
event.
^M ^^^mmmgl^^^^^
i^l
'^^^s*-«H
^^^'
/
WBt^^ -^^ZJ ^^^^x^^A*
?^
^ff^ommunist Party and many fellow-travellers was, in part, politically determined:
a'
recognition of the dire threat of fascism (particularly to the USSR, the ideal
against which the failings of American capitalism could be set) ami an acknowleilg-
Douglas Tallack
32
ment of the poor
electoral
CPUSA and
perfonnance of the
the Socialist Part}- in spite
of the visible collapse of capitalism. Alhances had to be made with other left-wing
New Deal.
groupings and even with liberals supporting Roosevelt's
In part, though,
merged with a rapprochement with what was perceived as the 'real' America. American writers, painters and photographers left their educational and publishing institutions and bohemian 'villages' to travel west and south. The greatest works of the 1930s are those that evoke the economic and social the polic}' of the Popular Front
decade while respecting the differences
disasters of the
among
those written about,
painted or photographed. In the narrative and photographs that constitute a book like
James Agee and W^alker Evans's Let Us Now Praise Famous Men (1941) there is also a painful acknow ledgment of the differences between the observing artists and the observed share-crop farmers (see Figs.
This distance
4, 5).
is
largely missing in the
sentimentalized realism of Holl\"vvood's response to the Depression: notably in the populist films of a director such as Frank Capra, in which a folksy togetherness,
underpinned by
a
manner
culated
strong nationalist message, triumphs over
adversitv'.
In a
the Popular Front also sought to tap the enduring,
more
cal-
if politically
ambiguous, tradition of American populism. SvTnbols had to be mobilized (the
who might
farmer rather than the urban worker,
too easily be confused with
a
Furo-
pean proletarian; the small town communitv'; and even 'The Star-Spangled Banner'); prejudices had to be exploited (against
folk music.
became
modernists as well as
elitist
communications had to be opened through
bankers); and
cit\-
literature, the visual arts
and especially
The sphere of culture became central, rather than peripheral.
political, rather
argued that
it
was losing
than merely aesthetic
;
Culture also
but the Pnitisan RevieTV intellectuals
edge.
its critical
Clement Greenberg, later to champion the Abstract Fxpressionists, took up the theme of mass culture in his essay 'Avant-Garde and Kitsch', published in Paitisan
He
Revie-d' in 1939.
attacks a
cosv-^,
representationalist art that could
all
too easily be
co-opted by both the Soviet and the American versions of mass culture. Also in the pages of Paitisan Rroim- in the
1930s and the 1940s
late
we
find parallels to
Greenberg's argument in essays on literature and cinema by Philip Rahv (one of the editors),
Dwight Alacdonald, Lionel
are not the ordinar\- people
often the most
who
Trilling,
Fred Dupee and others. Their 'heroes'
populate the novels of Steinbeck, but the
unlikely artist - the cosmopolitan
Henry James
with conservative political views. These writers took on ical
a
or
artist,
heroic and a politically rad-
character precisely because - according to the Paitisan Revieii- critics - the
cult}'
and
T S. Eliot, writers diffi-
of their work resisted the incorporating logic of capitalism and communism.
It
James or the austere Eliot into the man in the street so Although we can glimpse here the reasoning that was to permit many American intellectuals to abandon politics and become entangled with the High Art apostles disdainful of mass culture who dominated the 1950s, it is
would be hard
to turn 'late'
central to Popular Front thinking.
important to note that for Greenberg, could be,
it
who was
tr}ing to define
what
a socialist art
was the kind of polic}' espoused by the Popular Front that represented an
abandonment of political
radicalism. Similarly,
Dwight Alacdonald
cited the films of
the Soviet director Sergei Eisenstein as political cinema that was true to the specificit}'
of its medium. Montage, Mcdonald explained, drew attention to the construct-
edness of a film and so was quite different from the seamless product perfected by the
HolK^vood studio system in the 1930s. Thus, the Partisan Review editors and contributors - later more generally known as the New York Intellectuals - had their Left credentials enhanced by their anti-Stalinism. It was in 1938 that Paitisan Review courted and defended Leon Trotsk}- for his opposition to Stalin and for his advocacy of an art that was revolutionan- by being experimental and avant-garde rather than by toeing the Part}'
The
line.
events of the late 1930s help us to understand
culture, politics
and society changed
War was the cause of the the role the
decade, yet
Communists had
for
American
ended
the relationship between
The
Spanish Civil
and with suspicions aroused at news of the Moscow Trials - those Philip Rahv - led to painful divisions. Dwight it
in defeat
played. Meanwhile,
'ferocious surprises', according to
how
intellectuals.
Culture, Politics and SocieU' in Mid-Centun' -America
Figs. 4, 5
Walker Evans, cotton farmers
33
in
Alabama, 1941
Macdonald and Malcolm Cowley
USSR had
(the
to be
abandoning the
Part}'
out sharply, the latter offering only expedience as
an explanation for not
over the executions and imprisonments ordered by Stalin. But
argument was undercut
this
fell
defended against the threat of Hitler)
in
1939 with the Xazi-So\iet Non-Aggression Pact, and
the disillusion completed by subsequent revelations about the So\-iet labour camps.
The Second World
W^ar -
at least after Pearl
Harbor
the Holocaust in 1942 - did not divide intellectuals ald maintained the tradition of
Thoreau
in his 1939 essay
in 1941
and the
as the first had,
first
reports of
though Macdon-
independent thinking associated with Bourne and
'War and the
Intellectuals:
Act U', published in Pnnisau
Review.
Post- War Years: Pliiralisvi, Consensus
The
The
intellectual inheritance of the 1930s was, then, twofold. First, left-wing thinkers
felt a
strong sense of betrayal. In the subsequent reaction against extremism, com-
munism seemed ism,
and Critique
the other end of the spectrum from fascism, while Hegelian iMarx-
according to another radical about to turn awav -James
'totalitarianism in philosophy'.
The
Burnham-was
shocks of the 1930s sent American intellectuals
a toughened liberalism which, for Burnham, Irving Kristol and Sydney Hook, modulated towards an even tougher neoconservatism. The other leitmotiv to resurface from the 1930s was modernism itself,
in a
determined search for centrist positions,
in a variet)' of guises, but usually crisis versions that signalled the end. or loss, of long-
standing narrative and aesthetic forms. B\ tracing the conjunction of these t\vo
themes, ist
be made in
we can
society.
better grasp the tension between .\merican intellectuals and capital-
There was
also a
geography to
this tension.
for the diversity of mid-centur)- intellectual
While the strongest case can
life, it
had become concentrated
New York at a time when the
ferent places, mostly In The
fabric of eveiyday life was being woven in many difnew suburbs and expanding Western and Southwestern cities.
End of Ideologs' (i960), a collection ot essays written during the 1950s, the documents the loss of faith in grand designs, Marxism being
sociologist Daniel Bell
the closest to his
own
personal history and to that of his contemporaries and (lid Left
Douglas Tallack
34
Xew
mentors among the
communism
York
These 'twice-born'
Intellectuals.
intellectuals (born
They were what would replace absolute historical explanations. The glib answer is 'America' or 'Americanism': Dwight Alacdonald's remark that, 'Reluctantly, I chose America' is usually interpreted as the final proof of de-radicalization and of acquiesinto
and born again out of
were not simply
it)
in reaction.
also asking
cence. But this
too simple an answer
is
How New
baut, in
(as is
the parallel explanation, by Serge Guil-
York Stole the Idea ofModem Ait, 1983, for the triumph of Abstract
CLA-funded s}Tnbol of .\merican freedom). It underplays both the betrayals of the 1930s - intellectuals with the benefit of hindsight really ought to ask what they would have done if faced with a similar switchback of events and choices - and the difficult}' then - and perhaps even now - of locating 'actually existExpressionism
ing socialism',
embrace
as a
let
centrist
alone
communism. This
is
not to say that some intellectuals did not
and even neo-conser\-ative positions with unseemly
haste, gi'ving
credence to McCarthyism and attending government-sponsored congresses and s\Tnposia
on
\^"arriors in the 1950s. But, for others,
1930S and the
made some of
most rigorous Cold the rethinking that went on between the mid-
cultural freedom. Ex-radicals
the
1950s was not just painful but thoughtful and offered important
late
non-Mandst redefinitions of politics and
culture, as well as
ways out of the consensus
of the 1950s.
politics
In The Lonely Croi:'^ (1950) Da\id Riesman shares, with Daniel Bell, the con\iction that only a structured political pluralism could keep at bay the feared messianic drive
towards
total
power. Post-war intellectuals looked back to Alexis de Tocqueville's
American primer on the coming of mass
society-,
the two-volume Demoa-acy in
(1835 and 1840), for the value of free associations
ica
interest or veto groups. gical blocks,
These created
a shifting set
Amer-
they came to be called,
or, as
of alliances rather than ideolo-
encouraged the dispersal of power into issue-based groups and therefore
functioned as a bulwark against a homogenized and manipulatable mass society. Nevertheless,
The Lonely Crowd hardly reads
and Tocqueville's
societ}-
like a celebration
about mass
fears
of America as the ideal
societ\- are translated into cultural terms.
As Riesman's title suggests, the amorphousness that made American politics infertile ground for totalitarianism also resulted in uncertainties and a loss of direction. Sociologically, there
is
an
anxietv"
about personal
alhed to a superficialit}' that was
man
identit)" in
an 'other-directed'
societ\^,
too plain in the world of advertising, which Ries-
all
describes in certain sections of his book.
Riesman's misgi\ings about mass culture appear fully formed in the essays of
Dwight Alacdonald and other
New
Yorkers. This suggests that cultural anxieties
about the pre-digested products of the media industr\^ were the residue of radicalism over after these intellectuals' political reconciliation with -\merican
left
link
between
politics
became side-tracked
and culture that had been so productive
societ\'.
The work
in their 1930s
into a stale elitism. Alacdonald's best-known essay, 'Alasscult
and Alidcult' (1962), could well be his least perceptive. However, the gulf between the New Yorkers and American culture was never so wide as in the work of exiled Frankfurt
School theorists. For Theodor
exerted
a quasi-totalitarian
W! Adorno and
control over .\merican
dence in the working classes
as
so effectively that even resistance could be
political critique
New
York
its
accommodated
Intellectuals
were
in the typical in
German
can observe in other key post-war American books
On
a
the one hand, a celebration of political plur-
lack of apparent ideological strife;
Men Who Made
It
totalitarianism.
tension comparable to
on the
other, a recognition of certain
shortcomings in American society and history. In The Americaii
tempestuous
Holh-wood
danger of losing their
problem with the Frankfurt School was that they interpreted Amer-
that in Riesman's The Lonely Crowd.
the
confi-
message of democrac\- and abundance
ican society through the lens of their experiences with
ahsm and
little
of mass culture, this being the legacy of Bourne and Partisan Revirw
in the 1930s, the
We
with
an agent of change, Adorno and Horkheimer dis-
sected a 'culture industr)^' that disseminated
or soap opera ending. If the
Alax Horkheimer, Holh'wood
societ}*. Alarxists
Political Tradition
and
(1948) Richard Hofstadter observes how, underhnng an often
political history^, there
is a
reassuring commonalit)- of vision across the
Culture, Politics and Society in Mid-Century- America
35
spectrum. Ever since the constitutional debates of the 1780s there has been
political
an unquestioning acceptance of the value of private propert}^, economic individualism
and competition. With another leading historian, Daniel Boorstin, the tension appears in betw^een two of his books. In The Genius of American
United States
intellectualism in the
is
almost lauded because, in Boorstin's reasoning,
more acute and wide-ranging the
the
(1953) anti-
Politics
political analysis (the
more
jMarx, the
more
Rousseau, and so forth), the more unhealthy the political climate. Fortunately, in The
bnage
{i()6i)
power
own injunctions and analyses the American media's news and spread self-deception - an approach that undermines the
Boorstin ignores his
to create
complacent nationalism of his
As already remarked,
earlier study.
of post-war thinking was the surprising
a characteristic
coalescence in the social sciences of theorizing about what
should be and outlook, the
a
modernist
latter, if
sensibility.
Where
not pessimistic, was
a non-totalitarian societv'
the former was cautiously optimistic in
at least beset
by
(in
Daniel
Bell's
words)
and complexity'. Perhaps more accurately, these former late modernist outlook because - despite certain traits famil-
'irony, paradox, ambiguity,
radicals iar
were drawn to
from the
'classic'
a
modernism of the 1880s
to the 1920s (ahenation; fear of,
cination with, the new; antipathy towards mass culture) -
by the double shock of the collapse of capitahsm and the
when reading
we
up short by the language of aesthetics and a someyet always experienced, voice warning against the tragic limitations of
and
realities.
some progress could come out of the tension between
The voice is
that of Arthur Schlesinger Jr.,
Center (1949), wrote: 'By making choices,
own moral
personality.
This
is
man makes
men
weak
to the point
who,
in
The
Vital
himself: creates or destroys his
brave and bleak dilemma. But such a philosophy
a
The
imposes an unendurable burden on most men. drive the
of sociahsm. Often,
economic works of mid-
are brought
rationality, while asserting that
possibilities
fas-
was an outlook revived
failures
the canonical political, historical, social and
centur)^ America,
times wear\^,
this
and
eternal awareness of choice can
where the simplest decision becomes
a
nightmare. Most
prefer to flee choice, to flee anxiet\', to flee freedom.'
Schlesinger's
modernism has
a
decidedly Existentialist
feel.
At times, the philo-
sophical rhetoric seems intended to give a tautness to a position - liberalism - that
has not generally been associated with risks or commitments. Moreover, the Existentialist
idea of the
freedom to make oneself could, and
did,
become merely a gloss for A more generous inter-
a self-interested choice in favour of American individualism.
pretation of Schlesinger's rhetoric, however,
of the post-Second World
War
is
that
it
reflected the pervasive anxiety
years (Riesman's image of a lonely
resonance for the period), together with the need to define
a
crowd has
a real
position without the
props of established ideologies. With no credible templates to place upon existence, the modernist indeterminac}^ of intellectuals. In hrational Man: rett, a
meaning became an
available
mode of thought
A Study in Existentialist Philosophy (1958) \Mlliam
post-war editor of Paitisan Review, acknowledges a certain sombre
to
Bar-
qualit)-
'which went against the grain of our native youthfulness and optimism'. Nevertheless,
Barrett sees in Existentialism both a necessary check
upon
that optimism,
which
had been powerless to prevent totalitarianism, and an encouragement to those who had come through the
American
illusions of the 1930s,
liberalism', as Schlesinger puts
discussed by Barrett in hrational
it.
reborn on the dangerous 'tightrope of
Hemingway
Man, though
is
the only American writer
there was an E.xistentialist strain in
post-war American literatuie, notably in Dangling
Man
(1944) and Seize the
Day
(1956) by Saul Bellow, himself a contributor to Paitisan Review, and in 'The WTiite
Negro' (1957) by Norman Mailer, though Mailer eschews European favour of 'the American existentialist - the hipster'.
social t^pcs in
Although social and political scientists may be bemused, one way to distinguish between the important non-aesthetic texts under discussion is to look at the versions of modernism to which they directly or indirectly here by the
drawn
art critic
Harold Rosenberg.
to' the reconciliatory, tragic
intellectuals because
it
seemed
He
also
modernism
sufficiently
reler.
Appropriately,
came out of the
we
are helped
1930s, but was less
that had attracted
many post-war
comprehensive to contain
all
points of
Douglas Tallack
^^6
enough
yet experienced
\ne\v,
to recognize the dangers of totahzing ideologies.
Instead, Rosenberg, while sharing his contemporaries' acute sense of historical crisis,
found in his contact with those he
calls
the 'American action painters' the impetus to
break out of the enclosed consensual spaces of post-war thought. WTiere Riesman and Bell,
recommended negotiated
writing about mid-centur\' interest-group politics,
responses (progress 'on the diagonal'. Bell called
it),
Rosenberg, writing about the
Abstract Expressionists, evokes a radical, participatory politics which would not
moment the canvas an arena in which to act -
(re)appear until the street protests of the 1960s: 'At a certain
began
to appear to
one American painter
after
another
as
rather than as a space in which to re-produce, re-design, analyze or "express" an
\Miat was to go on the canvas was not
object, actual or imagined.
WTiere Clement Greenberg, the other great
event.'
but an
a picture
of z\bstract Expressionism,
critic
defined an avant-garde according to the degree of attention to the form and medium,
Rosenberg's experiential, phenomenological modernism was more dynamic, 'an event' potentially capable of being activated
by events other than those contained
within art history.
Up from
To
the
ip^os
appreciate the social and political importance of Harold Rosenberg's notion of
'action'
we may turn
text of hers that
mitment
to the exiled
German
thinker
Hannah Arendt
(Fig. 6)
and to
a
probably did most to confirm American intellectuals in their com-
Origms of Totalitarianism
to non-ideological politics. Yet Arendt, in The
(1951), amazingly, did not allow her experiences of totalitarianism to create blanket
judgments on the value of mass movements. For
her, the genealog;^ of totalitarianism
included, crucially, the loss of public political space in the nineteenth centur\\
empty arena had then been
filled
by ideolog\^ and terror and by masses of people,
whether victimizers or victims. Those post-war American standably,
saw totalitarianism
That
as the antithesis
of private
intellectuals
life
who
and
who, under-
latched
on
to
only the consequences of 'massification' found themselves intellectually caged -
unable to interpret political participation other than in the shadow of totalitarian regimes.
It
was hardly surprising that many of the
New Yorkers found it hard to sup-
port whole-heartedly the kinds of political action that became widespread with the Civil Rights
Alovement, the new Women's iMovement, the Counter-Culture and the
protest marches against the
Vietnam War. To propose
a generation
gap
is
to miss the
intellectual explanation for their suspicion of public action.
However,
a
few post-Second World
War
intellectuals can be singled out because Fig. 6
they continued to ask the (i960),
difficult questions:
Paul
Goodman
Absurd
in Groiving up
Dwight Macdonald
Michael Harrington
in his editorship of Politics between 1944 and 1949, The Other America (1962) and C.Wright Mills. Replying to
in
David Riesman's sympathetic account of interest-group
politics, iMills raises, in
The
Power Elite (1956), the old questions of power. Who decides on the limits of political action and under what circumstances (asking this during the Cold War echoed Bourne's statement that 'war
is
alesce along ideological lines, since Mills's
book is devoted
\Miy should did within the power
the health of the State')? it
clearly
politics elite?
not co-
Much
of
to arguing that, in spite of the busyness of day-to-day politics,
the lobbying and shifting alliances,
power has continued
to be concentrated at the
and a bottom - Harrington's 'other America'. Against what he
top, with an illusion of democratic decision-making at intermediate levels,
growing underclass
at the
sees as a structural, rather than personal, conspiracy in for the participator)' politics advocated his 'Letter to the
New-
had seemed so dead realistically
in
American society Mills opts
The
Human
Condition (1958). In
Left' (i960) Mills also revives the idea of utopianism,
in the
which
post-war years. Thinking other than responsibly and
could be emancipatorv^
Having claimed much lining
by Arendt
some of its
for the intellectual
legacies.
The
life
of the 1950s,
it is
worth
briefly out-
'break-out' of the 1960s and 1970s, although often
Hannah
.\rendt
Culture, Politics and Society^ in Mid-Centun,- .America
attributed to
demographic and sociological
intellectual in
its
of consensus politics by Mills, Arendt, ever, the
factors
and sometimes dismissed
drug and generational dimensions, was
at least
37
as anti-
informed by critiques
Goodman, Macdonald and Harrington. How-
subsequent disappointments and defeats experienced by 1960s radicalism
(which actually date back to 1968, but gathered pace in the 1980s) have,
as in the
1950s, produced a certain amorphousness in contemporar)' political culture. This has
worked
to the advantage of those in power. Since 1979
and Christopher Lasch's The
Culture of Narcissism there have been a series of cultural jeremiads, the most recent
being J. K. Galbraith's despairing The Culture ofConteiir?}ieiit{iggi). idea of micro-politics has energized
many marginal
not acknowledge the
link, there are
some
1950s interest-group
politics,
of history' again
(to
made
some
with
extent Francis
its
It is
true that the
groups, and while radicals would
similarities to the
more
positive aspects of
notion of incremental gain. But talk of 'the end
Fukuyama is recapitulating Daniel Bell) has once power difficult to ask. Intellectuals have reduced
the big questions about
ambitions and mostly seek productive ways to inhabit and (another 1950s echo) negotiate the institutions
demics, with their this
of
own
a
post-modern
society.
battles over curricula
That many
intellectuals are
and funding to
fight,
turning inwards. However, since the mid-1980s there has been
est in broader, ethical questions
now
a
renewed
concerning rights and the motivation of
action. After the shift of intellectual authority to
Europe,
it is
aca-
has accentuated inter-
political
noticeable that Ameri-
can intellectuals have been looking for productive ways to link their
own concerns
with those of Jacques Derrida, Michel Foucault, Jean-Frangois Lyotard and others.
The
philosopher Richard Bernstein has given an important lead.
that in his is
at stake
1950s:
most recent book, The New
'It is
form of the
action which
vita activa
is
analysis of action
We
is
condition of plurality and
part of this essay
last
owes
a great deal to
Richard King's advice and to two essays by him in particular:
'Endings and Beginnings: Politics in
Arendt's Early Thought', Political Theoij, vol.
12
and 'The Rosenberg Case', Over Here: Revieirs in American Studies, vol. 11, no. 2 (Winter 1991), pp. 85-103. For more general accoimts of America and American intellectual Hfe (1984), pp. 235-51,
at
mid-century, readers
may
consult the following:
Paul A. Carter, Another Pait of the Fifties, New York, 1983; Carl N. Degler, Affluence and Anxiety:
American
John
P.
Society Since 194^, Glenview, IL, 1968; Diggins, The Proud Decades: America in
War and
Peace,
/p^x-z^^o,
New York,
1988;
Rochelie Gzi\\n, A?nerican Wo?nen Since i(J4),
London, 1987; Geoffrey Hodgson, America in Our Time From World War II to S'ixon: What Happened and Why, London, 1976; William E. Leuchtenberg,
A
Troubled Feast: ATfterican Society Since 194^, Miller and
Glenview, IL, 1979; Douglas
T
Marion Novak, The Fifties: The Way We Really Were, Garden City, >JY, 1977; Richard H. Pells, The Liberal Mind in a ConsetTative Age: American Intellectuals in the k^^os and kj^os. New York, 1985; .Michael Paul Rogin, The Intellectuals and McCarthy: The Radical Spectre, (Cambridge, SW, 1977; Andrew Ross, No Respect: Intellectuals and Popular Culture, London, 1989; Douglas Taiiack, Td-enticth Centuiy A?nerica, London, 1991; .Alan M. Wald, The New York Intellectuals: The Rise and Decline of the Anti-Stalinist Leftfi-om the k^^os to the ujHos, Chapel Hill, NC, 1987.
natalit)^ that is
have become blind and forgetful of what a
"laboring
intended as an act of retrieval, to reveal
be completely obliterated.'
The
significant
in the
exhibited in the public space of political debate, action
human
about action, and are on the verge of becoming
Note
it is
by summarizing an important lesson taught by Hannah Arendt
that presupposes the
Bibliographical
And
he chooses to explain what
Constellation (i 991),
societ}-."
the highest
is
distinctive
But [Arendt's]
a possibilit)' that
can never
i
;
39
AWahavi A. Davidson
The Armory Show and in
Early
Modernism
America
The International Exhibition of Modern Art of 191 3, popularly known as the .\rmory Show because it was held from 17 February to 15 March at the 69th Infantn^ Regiment Armory
in
New
York,'
was far-reaching
in
its
impact. Bet\\'een 62,102 and
75,620 people' paid to see some 1,300 European and American works, beginning chronologically with a miniature by
Show was an
Goya and extending
extravaganza (see Figs,
i,
Futurists as a group excluded themselves
2).
to the present.
Thus, the
Although there were large gaps -the
- the Show represented many of the major
artists
and most adventurous positions from the end of the nineteenth century up to
19 1
Of
3.
the Europeans, for example, there were fourteen Cezannes; nine Henri
Rousseaus; eighteen Van Goghs; eight Picassos, including three drawings or paint-
INTERNATIONAL EXHIBITION
Of
MODERN
ART
ASSOCIATION OF AMERICAN PAINTERS AND SCULPTORS 69»f
INFTY REOT ARMORY. NEW YORK CITY FEBRUARY IS"' TO MARCH i^^ 1Q13 AMERICAN & FOREIGN ART. IHE OUtSTS VklU BE — INGRES. DEIACROIX. DEGAS,
AMONG CE'zANNE. REDON. RENOIR. MONET SEURAT VAN GOCH. HODIER. 5LEVOGT JOHN. PRYDE. 5ICKERT. MAILLOT, BRANCUM. lEHMBRUCK. BERNARD, MAT1.S:>E, MANET MGNAQLAUTREC.tONDER, DENIS. RUSiELL. DUFY, BRAQUE.HERBIN. GlElZts.
SOUZA-CARDOZO.
ZA.V..
DU CHAMP-VILLON,
GAUGUIN, ARCHIPENkO, BOURDELLE.
Fig.
191
DE SEGONZAC.
Poster for the .\rinor\- Show,
I
3.
C.
Xew
York,
Hirshhom Museum and Sculpture Garden,
Smithsonian Institution, Washington,
DC
ings from a
i9ioto 1912 (and
a
1909 bronze head),
all
in the 'anah^cal'
Cubist
st}'le;
non-objective Improvisation by Wassily Kandinsky; and four Marcel Duchamps,
including Nude Descending a Staircase (Fig.
3),
which became the most censured of all
the pieces. Of the late-nineteenth and twentieth-centur)^ Americans, there were many works by the Ashcan group and of the modernists, there were ten watercolours ;
by John Marin, four of them showing the newly erected Woolworth Building; three pieces, including tu^o
Fauve landscapes, by Alfred Maurer (who was
still
in France);
Andrew Dasburg; eight landscapes and an interior in a ver\' manner by the Philadelphian Arthur B. Carles four still-lifes by Patrick Henr\^ Bruce; five watercolours by Stuart Da\is, still painting in an Ashcan mode; and a nearly non-objective piece by the Chicagoan Manierre Dawson, added to the Show when it was held in Chicago from 24 March to 16 April. Other American modernists, or modernists-to-be, included Marsden TTartle\^ Joseph Stella, Albert Ryder, Oscar Bluemner, Alorton L. Schamberg, Charles R. Sheeler, and William and Marthree oils and a plaster by
free-flowing
;
guerite Zorach.
The Show was would
collections of modernist art.
Lillie P. Bliss,
Vtcw of the
.•\rmor\-
Show,
Xew York,
1913
1.
I
he most complete account,
e.\hihition the 2.
is
Anno)y
Ibid., p. 95.
Milton
\\.
TTy far, ot
Shon', (irecnwich, C.'\\ 1963.
As Brown points out, compli-
cating factors, such as free admissions, it
the
Brown, The Story of
make
impossii)le to determine the exact figure.
made by
private collectors,
which
domain and form the beginnings of prominent These collectors included Dr. Albert C. Barnes; who bought works by Cezanne, Gauguin, Redon, Renoir, and X'^uillard
later pass into the public
museum
Fig. 2
also important for the purchases
Ah-aha?/i A. Davidson
4°
John Quinn and Arthur J. Eddy, who acquired, respectively, thirty-one and tw^entythree pieces; and \\ aher C. Arensberg. (The American modernists or modernists-tobe were not then considered purchase-worthy, and only
a
191
2
landscape by
Schamberg was sold.) Finally, the Show converted two American painters - Stuart Da\as and Henry Fitch Taylor -to modernism. It is instructive, in this regard, to compare a picture such as Davis's 191 3 saloon scene The Back Room (WTiitney Museum of American Art, New York), in a dark Ashcan style in which the atmosphere of the time and place
which
is
is
wonderfully evoked, with his 191 7 The President (Fig. 4), without the subtie oscillation,
in an 'anahndcal' Cubist style, although
merged planes and triangular scaffolding found in the corresponding work of Picasso and Georges Braque. There were some three dozen /Vmerican modernists, painters and sculptors working in the second decade of the centur\', and each has far as is
known, Davis and Taylor
w^ere the only ones
his,
or her,
who
own
stor}\ But, so
converted expressly as a
result of the
Show.
We do not know for sure which of the modernists actually walked
through the
aisles
and/or read some of the
surmise that
all
those in or near
New York,
tion was held there, did one of the two.
(who
many
reports
on the Show, but we may
or Boston or Chicago,
Some
when
the exhibi-
of the modernists were in France
at the
from 1903 to 1936 except for a \dsit to America in 1905), John Covert, xMaurer and H. LjTnan Sayen, while Hartiey was in Munich and Berlin; they, of course, could not attend. Yet even in Europe, time, such as Bruce
lived there continuously
American painters would have known something of the Show. Generally, either experience or even merely knowledge of the Armor)' Show would have encouraged and assured those
artists in
Europe and America who had already committed themhad not embarked on some solitary venture.
selves to avant-gardism that they
Pre-dating the
Armory Show,
Fig. 3
Alarcci
1
JiiLp.inip, \'iidc
Descending a
Museum
of Art; Louise and Walter Arensberg Collection Staircase, 191 2.
Philadelphia
The
the earliest American modernists included the
S\Tichromists-to-be, then in Paris: Stanton Macdonald-WTight, from Charlottesville,
\^rginia, and
Morgan
Russell from
New York.
Having worked
his
way through Fig. 4 Stuart Da\is, The President, 191 7. Alunson-Williams-Proctor Institute, Utica,
X\
Gail Le\'in, Synchromism and American Color New York, 1978,
Abstraction igio-igz^,
pp. 10-27. Also .Maril\Ti S. Kushner, Russell, Alontclair, >sji
Levin, op.
cit., p.
Morgan
1990.
43, suggests Kandinsk\''s
influence.
6.
See Anne Lee Morgan, Aithur Dove: Life and Work, With a Catalogue R/iisonne, Newark, N7, n.d., pp. 40-3. See Man,' Gedo, Maniare Daivson, exhibition catalogue, Chicago, Museum of ContemporArt, 1976. In 1908, because of a rise in the rent, Stieglitz moved from 291 Fifth Avenue across the hall ar\-
7-
to 293. The wall was removed, and one elevator was used for the two buildings. Stieglitz,
though, continued to use the
name
which he found more euphonious. William I. Homer, Alfi-ed Stieglitz. and the American Avant-Garde, New York, 1977, '291',
8.
p. 165. 9.
10.
See Brown, op.cit.,
Alfred
268.
Stieglitz-:
A
Collective Pottrait,
NT, 1934, pp. 126-7. Quoted ibid., p. 137. Cit\-,
11.
p.
See Dorothy Xorman, '.\n .American Place', in Waldo D. Frank et al., eds., America and
Garden
The .^rmon- Show and
dependence on Cezanne and declaring that balance of forms around a center as sculpture', a
Modernism
Early
41
and depth - not
'light is projection
a
Le\in and others have
Russell, as Gail
shown,' was by 19 12 basing his painting on sculptures, specifically on plaster casts of Michelangelo's Pietas and Slaves, which he broke up into a series of flattened,
making the sources
abstracted areas,
virtually unrecognizable (see Fig. 5). In 191 2,
New York, Max Weber painted
probably in
of brown, blue, green
a pastel consisting
and yellow swirling shapes which he called
Nor was
this the first
non-
objective painting by an American. Tu^o years earlier, Arthur Garfield Dove,
from
New York, produced a number of non-objective pieces meant to be seen
rural upstate as parts
of a
Music.''
series.'
In paintings of the next year, going back to childhood memories,
he used biomorphic shapes vaguely suggestive of horses, of leaves and of trees in a
meadow. In 19 10,
too,
Manierre Dawson,
designer and architectural draughtsman
a
in Chicago, probably derived the arcs, squares
and protruding
hill
forms in
non-
his
objective Prognostic (Fig. 6) from devices used in his profession." Thus, a great deal
was going on even before the Armory Show. Contributing more directly than the Armory tain at
Show
work of cer-
to the unfolding
New York 'salons':
American modernists were two
Alfred Stieghtz's galler}' 291
at 33 West 67th Street, in moved from Boston. Arensberg wished to be had stimulated him when he \isited the Armory Show
293 Fifth Avenue" and Walter C. Arensberg's apartment
which he near the
on
settled in early 19 14, having artists
and ideas that
day in
its last
New York.
photographer, at first devoted his efforts to his own work and promotion of other photographers. By 1907, however, six years before the Armory Show, he had also begim to show paintings and drawings by European and Stieglitz, a leading
to the
American modernists. Noteworthy exhibitions of the former included those of Rodin's drawings in 1908 and his drawings and watercolours in 1910; Cezanne's watercolours and Picasso's first one-man show in 191 1; and Henri Rousseau's paintings and drawings in 19 10.
man shows were
Among
Abraham Walkowitz and Dove Stieglitz
Morgan
Russell, Study after Michelangelo V
Museum, Morgan
Russell Archives
he gave one-
and Carles,
1;
in 191 2.
drawings by Matisse, only one of which was hung)
it.
Also,
some of the
artists
that
it
a great deal
He
it.
its
size
one was capable or even worthy of absorbing the wonderful secrets 291 the
air
of a mystical shrine.
phone directory, and would Neither did he ask for
a
tell
did
and
appeal
its
of ballyhoo) to a mass, largely uninformed public.
Rather than 'push' modernism, Stieglitz often held back, presuming that not
He gave
five
xdndicated what he had been
doing - but temperamentally he was not comfortable with
(accompanied by
may
and purchased
"-
he was promoting were presented in
Show - he knew
not, of course, oppose the 191 2. Montclair Art
191
was not invited to help with the organization of the Armory Show, as has pointed out,** although he lent three pieces to it - the Picasso
six
items from
'Pieta',
in
charcoal drawing of 19 10 by the same artist and a Matisse drawing (he
a
have lent
Fig. 5
Weber
Homer
William bronze,
whom
the ^American modernists to
Hartley in 1909; iVIarin in 19 10;
He
it
had
ever\'-
to impart.
did not have his galler)' listed in the tele-
those he did not favour that he had nothing for
standard commission, and even helped support his
own funds or with funds that he solicited. Though Stieglitz did not proscribe specific st}ies, he was
sale."'
artists
with his
artist's
should not be
would
«$^
clear in insisting that the
authentic personality be revealed through his work.
set
up
like another's.
He
opposed
st)iistic categories: 'It
is
as
One
classifications ol art, scoffing at those
there were
if
a
fall
kill
each other.'"
I
who
great Noah's ark in which
every species must be separated honi e\en- other species, so that finalK
upon one another and
work, then,
artist's
lence, the goal of 291, the
the\- would enhancement
.
.
.
and promotion of individualism, was dianietricalU' opposed to that of the Armory Show, which was to trace the overall development of Kuropean and ^American art over a
span of about one hundred and ten \ears. Yet varied as the styles ot Stieglitz's American modernists were, certain general
approaches were apjiroved. These included biomorphic lig. 6
Ahuiierrc D.nvson, I'mgixistic, lyio.
Milwaukee Art
Museum
motifs (Dove, Cieorgia O'Keeffe), Cubist passages witz,
Weber), l^une-like landscajies (Maurer),
\\
st\ li/.ations
of lanilscape
ithin city scenes (Marin,
Walko-
still-lifes in a 'syiubciic' (Cubist
man-
Abiiiham A. Dmicbon
4^
Fi?. 7
Max Weber, Chinese Restaurant, 1915. Museum of .American .\rt. New York
WTiitnev
ner (Hartley) and non-objective configurations evoking landscapes (O'Keeffe), music in general
(Dove, O'Keeffe) or specific musical compositions (Dove; see Cat.
Stieglitz, in the
the throbbing nature.
main, favoured work which was
activit}-
What was
of the
cit\'
lyrical,
as well as to the fecundit}'
not tolerated were the
strictiy
34).
expressive and responsive to
and expansiveness of
conceptual approaches nurtured in
the Arensberg circle.
In a small format, O'Keeffe, through mere cun'es and arcs, could suggest rain,
something
in the
around the place of her birth the Plains No.
II,
in
Sun
Prairie,
191 7; Anion Carter
Wisconsin
(for
Museum, Fort Worth).
looming presence. Yet the flowing cunes,
make
known
example. Light Coitiingon
would push present them
Later, she
flowers to the frontal plane and, by eliminating their landscape context, as a
a vast ter-
order of the seemingly endless plains she must have
as in Black Iris /// (1926; Fig.
i,
p. 47),
for distinct allusions to female sexual organs, allusions that O'Keeffe herself
adamantly denied. xMarin moved from decade of the centur\- to
tiltings
/7///.V
his tiltings
ture the excitement and, perhaps, the vertigo one
would then have felt among, or Loive?- Manhattan [Com-
Xew York (see
even above, the skyscrapers being erected in posing Derived from Top of Wooluorth], igii;
Weber
of structures early in the second
Cubist-like interpenetrations of buildings to cap-
Museum
Modern
of
Art,
New
York).
depicted the interiors as well as the exteriors of buildings, as in his 191 5 Chi-
nese Restaurant (Fig. 7),
by using kaleidoscopic arrangements of flattened planes that
represent parts of the architecture, and pressed together figures or fragments of
fig-
manner suggesting the influence of Italian Futurism. However, as L. D. Henderson has convincingly argued, Weber was here responding to the then wideures in a
spread theoretical discourse about the fourth dimension." Hartley, interested in the mystical significance of numbers, used numerals in his PoJTrait of a
Gennan
Ojficer
painting of flags, epaulets and other accoutrements of a Junker officer.
The
objects alluded to the heroic Cierman aviator and Hartley's probable lover, Karl
von
(Cat.
i), a
Freyburg, whose
initials are
numbers and the
triangular form at the top relate to the friendship of the
with .Arnold Ronnebeck,
Arensberg,
who
who
displayed at the lower
also
sened
in the
graduated from Harvard
left.
German
in 1900,
Levin discovered that the
two men
militar\- forces."
was interested
in the
Linda DaIr\Tnple Henderson. The Fourth Dime/islon and Xon-Euclidean Gemnetry in
hidden
meanings of Dante's Divine Comedy, and ters in general. It
of
artists,
in mental games, puzzles and esoteric matwas not surprising, then, that Duchamp - one of the most cerebral
who wanted
to 'put painting at the senice of
Modem Art. IV
Ciail I
mind' - and that French
Princeton, 1983, pp. 175-8. Levin, ilidden S\Tnbolism in .Marsden
lartley
s .\Iilitan,-
vol.54, no.
adventurer, the iconoclastic Francis Picabia (who had four oils in the
and whose sixteen Srd' York studies were shown by
from 17 March to
They
15 .\pril 1913),
became,
directed their .\merican followers to
Stieglitz
Armory Show
in art.
See William
.A.
Camfield, 'The Machinist
St\le of Francis Picabia', .Art Bulletin, vol. 48, nos. 3/4. 1966, p. 314.
immediately afterwards,
in effect, the 'high priests' of his salon.
new departures
14
Pictures', Arts .Magazine,
1979, pp. 154-8.
2,
K
.See .Michael Klein,
John Cozen, 1882-1960, Washington, DC, 1976.
The Armory Show and
Man
Fig. 8
West
Ra\',
6'jth Street,
c.
Early
Modernism
43
Marcel Diichamp V Studio, 55 191 7-1
33 West 67 New-York
ih
(191718
f,
2l
£
^
-J
Both Duchamp and Picabia passed from Cubist had become clearly Dadaist portraits', in ICI.
CEST FOI
1CI
which
in flavour.
fantastic or real
st\'les
to a vision which,
That year Picabia did
machines
a series
by 19 15,
of 'machine
portable lamp, a sparking plug, and
(a
STIEGLITZ
so forth) alluded to specific people through the appropriateness of the machine to
ET AMOUB
their personalit}' or vocation. In
one of these
(Fig. 9)
he 'portrayed' Stieglitz
as a
camera-automobile, in which the twisted bellows was flaccid and the gear-lever and brake were in the parked position, an indication that the proprietor of 291 had to a standstill as a leader of the avant-garde.'^
up painting
By 1915 Duchamp had
come
entirely given
for the production of ready-mades, unaltered facton^-made products - a
urinal (Cat. 22), a bicycle wheel, a hat-rack (see Fig. 8)
- that shocked by being pre-
sented as art objects, and of various assemblages, the most ambitious of which was the so-called Large Glass (see Fig. 2, p. 27). This consisted of tw^o ver\" large panes of glass split
by
a
horizontal sash; between
them were mechanomorphic
below the sash comprising the animus frustrated
ma
above
It
its
collages, with those
attempt to impregnate the ani-
it.
should be kept in mind that the American followers of
comprised ists.
in
a small
And some
contingent within the
much
Duchamp and
larger assembly of American
Picabia
modern-
of them created only a few pieces that were truly conceptual in
approach. Early in the decade Schamberg painted bright, Fauve-like landscapes, then icy, flattened, Fig. 9
Francis Picabia, Id,
The xMetropoHtan Museum .•\Jfred Stieglitz
Collection
c'est
id Stieglitz,
of Art,
1
915
New York;
abstracted machine parts, which eschewed the animistic overtones of
Duchamp. But
his
plumbing trap
in a mitre box, entitled God,
made
ciirn
191 8, just
before his death in the influenza epidemic in Philadelphia, was surely inspired by
Duchamp's ready-mades. John Covert, a cousin of Arensberg, took over certain stylaspects of Duchamp's work while avoiding its deeper meaning. In B?-ass Band of
istic
19 1 9 (Cat. 32) he derived the patterning, the outward thrust of circular forms and the
Duchamp's Chocolate Grinder, a version of which was incorporated within The Large Glass. But in place of a psychosexual drama, idea for the use of applied string from
Covert substituted
as his subject the
outward thrust of such brass instruments
as
The disturbing aspects of Duchamp's erotically charged Compared to the work of Duchamp and certain other Euro-
trumpets and trombones." art
were thus eliminated.
peans, there was often an innocence to American It
was of a kind perhaps most
tx'pically associated
modernism before the Depression.
with
a
newly assimilated
st\listic
and
ideological discourse.
The most consistent Dadaist America produced was Man Ray (see
Cat. 4-18),
who
based some of his paintings, ready-mades and assemblages on Duchamp's protot)'pes.
The
convey movement) of the performer at the top The Rope Dancer Accompanies Herself -with HerShadoii's (Fig. lo), for instance, |>robably derived from 13uchamp's by then infamous Nude Descending a tiny multiple figure (multiple to
of Man Ray's 19 16
oil
44
Abruhiirn A. Davidson
Fig. lo
Man
Herself -dith
Modem
/
Staircase.
A few of the
assemblages have an impUcidy pernicious quahn,
as
Ray, The Rope Dancer Accompanies
Her ShadooLS,
.\rt,
191 6.
The Museum
of
New York
does the
ironically titled Gift (Fig. 6. p. 199), a flat-iron with protruding carpenters nails
Man Ray also made camera-less photographs, placing various darkroom on the hght-sensitive surface of photographic paper. Duchamp was especially fond of America because it seemed to him to value tradition less than any other country- (he obsen'ed admiringly that buildings were torn attached at the bottom.
objects in a
down
ever}' generation)
tral to his art,
and because
it
venerated machines.
The
latter
became cen-
but he saw them not as things of power and smooth functioning, but
objects denoting frustration and scepticism.
a Staircase appear partially as free will of human beings
circumscribed. This public, but also
Dadaist stance.
a
by suggesting that
work
in a
By making
machine, rather
Cubist
st}'le
the figure in
like a Slink}' toy,
their
\ude Descending
he questioned the
movements were programmed and
was maligned not only by the general
by the French Cubists themselves, who were not prepared
Duchamp was
as
to adopt a
eager to produce images that conflated sexual and
Fig.
1 1
Francis Picabia, / See Again in Mernxny
My Dear Ldnie, Art, New York
19 14.
The Museum
of Modem
The
mechanical
energ\^. In
Bare by Her Bachelors,
.\nnon'
The Large Glass -xhe full Even - the nine bachelors
Show and
title
Early
of which
lower
at the
is
Modernism
45
The Bride Stripped
left
appear simply
metalhc receptacles of their masculinity, while the bride, in the upper
half, is a
as
kind
of engine.
As indicated, Duchamp's friend Picabia and
used
in the realization of their subjects; but they
work was more hermetic than Dear Udnie
(Fig. 11), created a
it
also turned to the
somewhat
experience in his
art.
who managed
In / See Again in
year before his 'machine portraits' and
call to
mind
in a Cubist
petal
Alan
on occasion, came
paratuses a malicious qualit}^ His Object a
still
The
Ra\^ the American who,
ronome with
to
Memoij My
uplifted skirts, the forms like sparking plugs, erect phalluses.
idiom, he drew on memories of an exotic dancer he had met on a boat
shapes
machine
Duchamp's
differently.
that of the rather reckless Picabia,
own
incorporate something of his
Man Ray
paper eye attached to
to
closest to nihilism, lent
trip.
some of his ap-
be Destroyed (Fig. 12) consisted of a
arm; the \iewer, following
its
its
met-
swinging
motion, could conceivably go mad.
The importance histor\'
of Duchamp's arrival in
New York in June
1
9 1 5 for the subsequent
of twentieth-century American art cannot be overestimated.
not only on
a coterie
of early modernists; the whole tenor of art from i960 to 1980,
including Pop, Minimal and Earth
and much
else, issued
He left his mark
from
his
art,
Post-Painterly Abstraction, Photo-Realism
dictum of 'putting
art at the service
of the mind'.
By
on the primac}' of the idea over the image - or at least on an equal emphasis between the two - he became the godfather of everything conceptual in American art. Some artists - Dove, for example - felt no compunction about being exhibited at insisting
Fig. 12
Original
Alan Ray, Object to be Destroyed, 1923. photograph by the artist
lost;
291 and also attending Arensberg's salon. Dove's side
and
its
The
'Arensberg' side.
art,
accordingly, had
latter featured collages
wherein
its
'Stieghtz'
specific indi\'iduals
or types of individual were 'portrayed' by objects suggesting their character. Grand-
mother (Fig. 13) consisted of weather-beaten shingles, pressed leaves, embroider)^ and a page from a Bible concordance to denote a grandmother's fragiHty and religious scrupulousness.
Another salon promoting modernism during the second decade of the held at the apartment of iMabel ture for
New Mexico
in 191
Although she did not exhibit era Work,
and Arensberg,
7.
Dodge
at 23 Fifth
Avenue from 191 2
financed such
littie
magazines
with his periodical as Others,
iMg. 13
Arthur Dove,
Gra;7i of Modem Art, Xew York, 1992, p. 23, notes how East Coker T.S.E. translates a temiinal situation: the painter/
poet grins, wide-eyed, into the void. An/ speech forestalls ends by facing and representing them. Cf. .Michel Foucault, quoted in Telotte, op. cit., p. 198: '\\'riting so as
to die
die
is
...
not
or perhaps even speaking so as not to
a task
undoubtedly
as old as the world.'
The Extremes
In retrospect, this rhetoric of active vision
of Abstract Expressionism
may sound wishful
guage always modify perception. Nevertheless,
it
since culture
91
and lan-
nurtured vivid and complex
art, as
Truman and Eisenhower epochs could not. Furthermore, if immediacy is another fable of the time-struck mind, some subsequent developments in Abstract Expressionism show that outlook itself under scrutiny. Apocahqsse was, somehow or other, delayed."" De Kooning's 1950s Woman paintings (see Cat. 97, 98) confound previous terrors banalit)' in the
with humour. Simultaneously, figure and surroundings blur: extremes can no longer
remain feline,
intact.
Though
During the 1950s
how Fig. 9
Philip Guston, East Coker T.S.E., igjg.
The Museum of Modem Musa Guston
Art,
New York;
Gift of
Wo?}imi II (1952;
Museum
of
Modern
with something of Blake's Tyger about her, she
the
Art,
New York)
looks
comic rather than sublime.
his brushstroke swells to erase boundaries.
titles also
Rosy-Fingered
is
blend Culture's traces and Nature: Door
Often unremarked
to the Rive?-
Dawn at Louse Poijit (note the Homeric epithet) and
. . .
is
(Cat. loi),
Whose Name was
Writ in Water. To be a 'slipping glimpser'- as de Kooning saw himself and as his mercurial
paintwork
still
confirms - thwarts
finalities.'"
Others went on to reprise old themes. Yet the outcome could be Portrait
and a Dreani
(Cat. 92) straddles this ambivalence.
that Pollock had once sought to unite:
the
The
self.
tives
pairings evoke, as
of time'. ^^ Parallels
Nothing
exist
it
fresh. Pollock's
Now divided are antipodes
image and abstraction, unconscious tumult and
were, 'the shape of
life
in relation to the perspec-
with Rothko's 1969-70 'black and greys' (see Cat.
118).
Rothko favoured after 1957 (see Cat. 114, 115), those preceding works still beckon the viewer. An alienating device, white borders, instead keeps these apart. Far from melodrama, they make closure and finalities their subject. That ultimately engaged Guston, too. Returning to a virulent representationalism around 1967, he scattered emblems of time and quite anticipates them. Despite the darkness
termination ever\n\'here in his paintings. Clocks, stark walls, lights soon to go out,
horseshoes parodying the (Fig. 9),
whose poetry was
parable here
may
figure the 'brute
"^^
final a
Greek
letter
'omega' and even,
in extremis,
TS. Eliot
long meditation on apocalypse and temporality. Guston's
then pinpoint Abstract Expressionism's broadest design: to recon-
enigma of ending'.'"
93
Mary Emma
Han'is
Black Mountain College:
European Modernism, the Experimental and the American Avant-Garde
Spirit
The summer of 1952 was not unlike pre\aous summers at Black Mountain The guest facult}' was exceptional, although, at that time, without critical was taught by Jack Tw'orkov
tion. Painting
in July
and Franz Kline
College.
recogni-
in August,
music
by John Cage and dance by Merce Cunningham. Karen Karnes and Da\dd Weinrib came from Alfred University to teach ceramics. Of the regular faculty, Charles Olson
Wolpe music, The composer Lou
taught literature, Stefan
Katherine Litz dance and Hazel Larsen
Archer photography.
Harrison,
remained
work on
to
M. C. Richards, came
his
who had
resigned in the spring,
opera Rnpunzel, and David Tudor, accompanied by
to give a concert of the
man, Henr\^ Cowell, Cage and Wolpe.
music of Pierre Boulez, Morton Feld-
Among
the forty-three students were
Nick
Cernovich, Fielding Dawson, Viola Farber, Harvey Lichtenstein, Joel Oppenheimer,
Robert Rauschenberg, Dorothea Rockburne and Besides the
Tudor
Cy Tvombly. on Thilosophical
concert, scheduled events included lectures
Foundations of India' by Nataraj Vashi, on the world hunger problem by Edgar Taschdjian and on contemporary^ music by Wolpe, as well as dance concerts by Jean
Erdman and
Litz. Yet, as
was often the case
at
Black Mountain, the most significant
events were spontaneous, an outgrowth of the atmosphere of intensive intellectual interaction.
Mealtime conversations would undoubtedly have included discussion of
the writings of Carl Sauer, Gestalt theor\^, Dada, the / Chhig,
Columbian
carvings. Abstract Expressionism, jazz,
Noh
Zen Buddhism,
theatre,
projective verse and the prevailing conservative political climate.
Huang Po
Doctrine of Universal
a single sitting,
and
same evening,
that
On
was
one afternoon Cage organized
later designated the first
Cage read The
to end, including notes, in
a theatrical farce, Occupe-toi de Briinhilde !
staged by the community. that
Mind from beginning
pre-
Antonin Artaud,
a
,
was written and
performance, given
'Happening'. Since teaching at
summer of 1948, Cage had begun to use chance procedures and a way of divorcing his own taste and ego from his work, and for this
the college in the
indeterminacy
as
event chance procedures were employed to create time brackets for the performers.
Fig.
I
theatre
Black Mountain College, dining on Lake Eden
i)>
MM
tM pinoa act«p>iii( I&e Mat danectlK!! aMa^iftn; a
[i
(fttUb to
words to possess
no it
different
just
his
work had
by knowing
This marked
it.'"'
a clear
to
buy
it
to have
artists
" ^
'
it
- they can have
by introduc-
;
sought, and largely achieved,
independence from the traditional market-based practice of the
most responsible
o^
oc dSn^ i^ rliaitctefacf: • OKtal bl
a •x'"
departure from convention
ing an unsaleable form of expression, Conceptual
laub, the individual
Mcvc
As he noted, collectors were
additional implications.
from other \iewers: 'They don't have
tcppon asd
for presenting the early
art world.
As Siege-
work of Kosuth, W'einer
and their colleagues Robert Barry and Douglas Huebler, has noted: 'Behind the socalled "dematerialization" there
was an attitude of general mistrust toward the
seen as a necessar\' finalization of the art work, and consequently towards existence and
its
market
its
object,
physical
value.''"
Particularly in their early phase, Conceptual artists emphasized the sitelessness of their art, One sheet
of
plywood secured to the
and exhibitions could take place without
galleries or dealers in the tradi-
tional sense. Catalogues often sufficed in presenting
new
formulations, and
floor or wall
when
actual exhibitions did take place these often consisted of photographs, diagrams,
words and books,
as well as
other forms of documentation relevant to
Perhaps the most important and,
in the
a
given idea.
long run, the most influential form of Con-
ceptual Art assumed photographic form. Indeed, the recent explosion of interest in
non-traditional photography dates to the advent of Conceptualism, with artists such as
John
Baldessari,
Dan Graham, Bruce Nauman and Ed Ruscha
all
employing the
camera, not in the production of refined aesthetic objects, but rather as
documenting This tion,
Fig. 10
1967.
Lawrence Weiner, Page from Statements,
The Louis
Siegclaub,
New
Kellner Foundation/Seth
last
many
their activities
point artists
is a
Beginning
in the late 1960s, artists
approach;
if a
With
means of
the critique of the formalist tradi-
characterization according to
def\'
a
ideas.
rather important one.
have come to
st\'le
tound that they need not master
a
or medium.
single formal
particular idea merited or required realization in a particular form,
they obtained the means to that end. As a result, determinations of quality are today increasingly based not
York
and their
on
as expressed in a variety-
can creative culture
st\'listic
grounds, but rather on the
of media. In part, this
in the 1960s,
with
a
is
qualit\-
of an
artist's
ideas
testimon\- to the richness of Ameri-
remarkable cross-fertilization occurring
in all
the arts, including music, dance, video, literature and film. WTiilc an artist such as •^4«-
Baldessari began by working with strongly conceptual content, he has since evolved into a leading figure in the manipulation of pre-existing photographic images.
Graham's work hovers,
tantalizingly,
between architecture, .Minimalism and C^oncep-
124
y^eal Benezra
tualism (see Cat. 223). Ruscha has ularly \\\xxy
form of conceptual and
film, \ddeo, dance,
imbued
his paintings (see Cat. 190) with a partic-
pictorial content.
Xauman has
used photography,
performance, neon and sculpture - evervthing, seemingly, except
painting -in his reconsideration of the meaning of art in contemporan,' societ\- (see
them and numerous others maturing in the 1960s, the advances made by Minimal and Conceptual artists throughout the decade proved both fertile Cat. 214-17). For
and
decisive.
125
Richard Aiyjistrong
Antiform: 1965- 1970
summer of
After lecturing on the idea during the
assembled
a
1966, the critic Luc\^ Lippard
group exhibition that autumn which she called 'Eccentric Abstraction'.
She used the same show's contents.
title
for an article published in
A wide-ranging
pard ascribed to their work
a
Art International describing the
selection, the exhibition featured ten artists.' Lip-
non-sculptural impulse that freely adapted aspects of
painting to three dimensions, joining Surrealist ploys with the
more formal
strategies
of so-called 'primary^ structures'. \Mth characteristic prescience, she identified crucial factor
Pop
Art's legac\' of accepting materials and attitudes previously
too Mjlgar or ugly to
work, with
its
ser\'e aesthetic
ends. Lippard singled out Claes Oldenburg's
penchant for manipulated shapes and surfaces and
physical metamorphosis, as an influence.
Bourgeois, Eva Hesse, Bruce
attempt
at analysing a
new
The show
Nauman and
attitude that
human
as well as the vertical
body. WTiile at least
sculptors, the generally
some of
younger
artists
celebration of
its
work by Louise and marked the first
included recent
Keith Sonnier,
was shortly to be dubbed 'process
iVIinimalism' and 'antiform'. Its characteristics
of the horizontal
and
were
a taste for
a sense
art',
new media,
a
'post-
valuing
of scale closely related to the
these traits were shared by the Alinimalist
represented in 'Eccentric Abstraction' infused
their eccentrically fashioned pieces with telling signs of the creative process.
revived credibility in facture, which had been largely ignored by the deliberately eschewed
as a
deemed
Pop
They
artists
and
by the Minimalists.
In 1966 Minimalism was itself a recent arrival: cated metal and plastic forms in the
Donald Judd had begun his fabrifirst one-man show
summer of 1964; Dan Flavin's
of fluorescent lights had been held later that year; Carl Andre's stacked St\Tofoam
oblongs had
Fig.
I
Felt pieces by Robert Morris
his exhibition at the
Leo
on show
Castelli Gallery,
in
New
York, 1968
'Eccentric Abstraction' was seen at the Fisch-
New York, from 20 September October 1966. It included work by Alice Adams, Louise Bourgeois, Eva Hesse, Ciar\' Kuehn, Bruce Xauinan, Don Potts, Keith Sonnier and Frank LincoIlT\'iner. Lippani s 'Eccentric Abstraction' article was published \nAii Iiitcniatioiial, vol. 10, no. 9, November 1966, pp. 28-40. bach Gallery, to 8
first
been seen in 1965. Judd's
call for 'specific objects' in
the 1965 Arts
12
6
Richai'd
Annstiwig
Yearbook defined the painting/sculpture hybridization which he saw taking place: 'In
the
new work
tered.
There
. . .
the shape, image, color, and surface are single and not partial or scat-
aren't
tional areas.''
any central or moderate areas of parts, any connections or
Robert Morris's 'unitan-
shown
objects',
as
an ensemble
at the
transi-
Green
Galleiy in 1963, were prime examples of Judd's dicta and represented the apogee of Morris's reductivism. Involved in performances by
way of
his contacts
with young
choreographers and dancers throughout the early 1960s, Morris was temperamentally
attuned to the emerging interest in process, as
is
e\'idenced by his
second half of the decade. Certainly, by the time he published
a series
Aitfomni during 1966-67, Morris's position had evolved into
work of
the
of articles in
a re\asionist one.
Codifying practices of the pre\nous few years, he mentioned investigations of tools
and materials, noting the frequent absence of the figure in favour of a focus upon the force of gravity. ial.
Chance
is
'Random
piling, loose stacking,
accepted and indeterminacy
is
hanging, give passing form to mater-
implied since replacing will result in
another configuration.'' Compositional attributes of this kind had become an integral part of Morris
s
own work by this time (see Fig. i), and were almost ubiquitous in that artists as Nauman, Richard Tuttle and Barr\' Le Va. Lippard's
of such younger
'Eccentric Abstraction' had included pieces of cut burlap by to be seen either hung on the wall or tossed into
the result as 'not-work
It
has
a corner.
Xauman that were meant One critic characterized
no formal character and yet no
The idea of working something really sibilities.'^ Nauman consciously embraced this either
particular content
inconsequential seems to have pos-
nascent anti-monumental concept.
Speaking of another fibreglass piece of about the same time, he said that to
do with trying to make
a less
important thing to look
his
work 'has
at'.'
A parallel motive lay behind Richard Turtle's work from the moment of its earliest appearance, in 1965. Convinced of the irrefutable logic of xMinimalist sculpture, Tuttle addressed the larger context of site in quirky presentations of modestly scaled,
imperfectly
made and
evocatively coloured objects (see Fig.
2).
floor or the wall (and there at unexpected heights), his pieces
Seen variously on the
embodied
a
personal
allusiveness that further contravened the deliberate impersonalit}" of the t}'pical imalist object.
Min-
Formal playfulness of conception and casual composition continue to
distinguish his oeuvre, as does an essential pictorialness: always modest, Tuttle's
painted objects or relief paintings insist on
a
symbiosis between two and three dimen-
sions.
Fig.
2
Bett}'
Mew of the exhibition 'Richard Tuttle' Parsons Gallen", Xew York, 1965
Antiform: 1965-1970
127
Robert Smithson's Mnror Displaceiiicnt: Cayuga Salt Mine Project (1968-69) on show in the exhibition 'Earth Art' at the Andrew Dickson WTiite Art Museum, Cornell Universit)', Ithaca, Fig. 3
ISr\',
1969
The
anti-art inferences
ticulated in
common
to both
Nauman
and Tuttle were more
Robert Smithson's mature work, dating from the
six
fully ar-
years preceding his
death in an accident in 1975. Smithson invented the category 'non-sites' for
much
of
what he did, arbitrarily reconstituting landscape - most often industrial rather than natural - indoors. His preoccupation with developing social and aesthetic theories to support such Art and the
activities
new
underscores his crucial position as
sculptors.
betu een Conceptual
His fascination with the industrially disfigured no man's
New Jersey indicates
land of suburban
a link
that his was a pioneering role in the develop-
With Gordon Matta-Clark, he was the first to interpret the post-modern landscape. Beginning with the Cayuga salt mine non-sites that he made for the exhibition 'Earth Art' at Cornell University' in 1969 (see Fig. 3), Smithson elaborated on a series of displaced earthworks that embodied entropy. ment of environmental
ethics.
Smithson's recreation of
ity-bound nature of
a
controlled field was but one manifestation of the grav-
much post-Minimal
plored process-derived
field situations
these ideas since 1966 while
still
production.
No
than Barr)' Le Va,
one more
insistently ex-
who had worked
alone with
attending graduate school in Los Angeles. During
the next four years he produced a series of complex 'scatter' pieces. Their critical
them appeared on the cover of the which contained an article on Le Va's work. The
influence and visibility increased after one of 2.
Donald Judd,
'Specific Objects', Aits Yearbook,
vol. 8, 1965, reprinted in
Donald Judd:
Complete Writings ig^^-ic)"^.
New
1975, pp. 181-9. 3.
on
Robert Morris, 'Antiform',
on Sculptures', published in February- and October 1966, and
three-part 'Notes
Summer 4.
1967.
Mel Bochner, 'Eccentric
Abstraction', Arts
Magazine,
November
1966,
p. 58. Bochner's own work was initial!)- allied with 'process' art, but soon assumed an
empirical, investigative form that located
it
within Conceptualism. 5.
Quoted
in
Anierican Sculpture of the Sixties,
Los Angeles County iMuseum of Art, 1967, p. 49. exhibition catalogue,
6.
W'iiloughby Sharp and Liza Bear, 'Interview with Barry Le \
a'.
Avalanche, no.
3,
Autumn
1974, P-^>^>- I his short-li\1?d underground tabloid was the house organ of \arious down-
town avant-gardes and therefore concerns of the moment.
refiects the
down
internal chronology.
its
a specific process, time'.''
Although
,
the material manifestations of his work, focusing instead
As he explained,
sophy of
its
is
work was
his
his large-scale
Le Va with
accumulations of felt,
much
glass,
indication of
wood and metal appeared
were organized by
his Conceptualist peers. All the
evident in his willing incorporation in
component
'not so
of what had been done to the material, as of marking off stages in
to be at the outer limits of anti-formalism, they
that allied
vol. 41, no. i,
1968 issue of Aitforin/i
himself played
Artforut?/, vol. 6,
no. 8, April 1968, p. 35. The title was the editor's, not the author's. See also Morris's
Artforu?fi in
November artist
\'ork,
a
a determinist logic
same. La Va's distinctive philo-
work of the random
disintegration
parts, their physically altered nature functioning as a record
of his
actual activity.
Another, more metaphysical, exemplar of aleatoric composition was Alan Saret, whose conglomerations of wire mesh and rubber were meant as carriers of poetic meaning. Saret's abiding interest in spiritual quests, often announced in the titles he chose, prompted his move to India in 1969. That year, two young curators at the Wliitnc}- Museum of American .\rt, Jim
Monte and Marcia the new aesthetic. ings, sculpture
Tucker, organized an exhibition sun'e)ing the rapid evolution of F^ntitled 'Anti-Illusion: Procedures/Materials',
and performances by twent)-one
artists,
it
featured paint-
including Hesse, Le \
a,
Mor-
12
8
Richard Annstrong
Fig.
4
Mew of the
exhibition 'Eva Ilesse: Chain
Pohniers', Fischbach Ciallen',
Xew
York, 1966.
Acnetiou (1968; Rijksmuseum Kroller-AIiiller, Otterlo)
is
Museum
ris,
Nauman,
new
express a
left,
Repetition \'iueteeu /// (1968;
.\rt,
Xew York)
at the rear
Sonnier, Turtle and Richard Serra (Saret withdrew at the last moment).
In her catalogue text, Tucker proposed that the things
use
on the
of Modem
on
^^e^v
were 'not attempts to
materials to express old ideas or evoke old emotional associations, but to
new content
that
is
with material'.'
totally integrated
Hesse's contributions to the 1969 show, including Expanded Expansion (at ten by thirty feet, the largest resin piece she
her central position within
this
had created) and Untitled {Ice Piece), underscored
group of
artists
who, though
intellectually unallied,
were on friendly terms with each other. Hesse's work had become more ambitious her principal
medium
after she
turned to fibreglass
showing
in Lippard's exhibition three years before, her sculpture
as
earlier that year. Since its first
three stages: Surrealist wall-reliefs occupied her for rather
ning in early 1965; there followed tures
on
a grid structure (an
[Cat. 212],
came with the
was included
I
begin-
body of work comprised of anthropomorphic
fea-
unusually gestural example, Metronomic hregiilarity 11
in 'Eccentric Abstraction'); and, lastly, the culminating
works
1968. In such serialized
as
phase
Acartion and Repetition Nineteen III
Hesse successfully embodied her ideas about new formal
summer can know
to herself written that
she stated:
know and what I It is go.'" Her adaption of gesture
want to
a year,
the fibreglass and/or polyester resin works that she started producing in
summer of
(see Fig. 4)
a
had gone through
more than
the in
'It is
my main
unknown
values. In notes
concern to go beyond what
quantit}" fi-om
which and where
such hanging works as Right After (Fig.
5)
I
and
Fig. 5
Art
7.
Eva Hesse, Right After, 1969. Milwaukee Gift of the Friends of Art
Museum;
Marcia Tucker,
in Anti-Illiisioii: Pivceditres/
Materitils, exhibition catalogue,
Xew York,
Whitney Museum of .American .Art, 1969, p. ^o. The show also included works or performances by Carl .\ndre, Michael Asher, Bill Bollinger,
John Duff, Rafael
Ferrer,
Robert Fiore, Philip Glass, Xeil Jenney, Robert Lobe, Robert Morris, Steve Reich, Robert Rohm, Robert R\Tnan, Joel Shapiro and .Michael Snow. L\Tida Benglis's work could not be accommodated physically, S.
though
it is
Quoted
in
discussed in the catalogue.
Eia
tion catalogue, .\rt Galler}-,
Hesse:
Xew
A
Retrospective, exhibi-
Haven, Yale University-
1992, p. 45.
Antiform: 1965-1970
Fig. 6
'First
Papers of Surrealism', exhibition
organized by Andre Breton and Marcel Duchamp - whose string iab\Tinth' invaded the entire space
New York,
-
129
at the
\Miitelaw Reid Mansion,
1942
^rai Untitled {Rope Piece) (1970; WTiitney
Aluseum of i^\merican
Art,
profound link with the freedoms of Abstract Expressionism
reahsm and only
(see Fig. 6).
Her
abiht}', late in life, to
irrational fluidity elevated her
woman
work
to
to be included in a variety of
teUi' (Castelli
Warehouse,
New
New York)
as
accommodate both
its
present status as
rational structure
a well-spring.
'When
Attitude
The
Leo CasBecomes Form'
group shows, including
York, 1968) and
e\'inces a
negotiated \da Sur-
'9 at
(Kunsthalle, Berne, 1969), Hesse was admitted at an early date to the male bastion of
sculpture - a signal event, the consequences of which were cut short by her untimely death.
The VVTiitney and Castelli shows underscored the forcefalness of Richard Serra's new metal work; his acclaimed 'process' piece Splashing, done at the Castelli Warehouse, involved the repeated tossing of molten lead into a floor/wall joint. The hardened free-form castings futable
dominance of
attest
gra\it)^.
both to the defining role of
site
and to the
irre-
In turning to lead and then steel, as in One Ton Prop
(House of Cards) (Cat. 220), Serra deliberately overthrew the compositional primacy
of pre-welded Constructivist-derived sculpture in favour of leaning or balancing structures. insisted
His Prop
on the
series (see Fig. 7),
role of process
phenomenological drama.
Hg.
Works
7
1)\-
Richard Serra on shov\
in the
Nine Young (lUggenheim Museum,
exhibition 'Thcodoran Awards: Artists' at the
New
Solomon
York, 1969. I'Voni
R.
left to right:
Shovel Plate
Prop, Clothes Pill Prop, Wall Plate Prop, Right Angle
Prop
(all
1969)
-
by dint of the works' implied
in effect incorporating the \dewer in
Serra's earliest pieces (see Cat. 218),
instabilit}',
an ongoing
had employed rubber,
1 ^
Richard A nnstrong
o
and neon
fibreglass ing.
as
His famous 'verb
materials,
from
list'
of 1967-68 became
a projection
of his actions vis-a-vis his
the concluding 'to continue'.' Although
'to roll, to crease, to fold' to
among
they are
he defined for himself the significance of composition to mean-
the largest examples of the process genre, Serra's works nevertheless
Form
retain a structural clarit}- that elucidates his intentions.
simplified and mass
is
exaggerated in a reprise of the elemental, carved and cast shapes of Constantin Bran-
became an icon of the
cusi. Serra's sculptures
and have retained that status
era,
throughout the succeeding quarter of a century.
Even among anomaly.
for
one thing, the only one not to
and profound indebtedness to Marcel Duchamp,
live in
his
work
ished fi"om the beginning. WTiile livdng in California, tic
group of works that gave various forms both to
body
Nauman was
so heterogeneous a group of artists as this, Bruce
He was,
New York.
Nauman produced
Platfoiy?i
Made Up
(both 1966; Collection of Linda and
occupy
Nauman
many
human
as Collection of
My
Waist
of the Space Between Tivo Rectilinear Boxes on the Floor
Henry Macklowe, and Rijksmuseum
former
Miiller, Otterlo, respectively), the
the latter one of his
an eclec-
his abiding interest in the
Various Flexible Materials Separated by Layers of Grease with Holes the Size of
and Wrists and
an
its variet}-
(see Cat. 214-17) aston-
gauge of measurement and to negative space. Such pieces
as the
In
a 'soft sculpture' structured
on
Kroller-
were indicative of concerns that
plastic casts,
The
for another fifteen years.
long
titles
Dadaist strain underlying his creative impulse as well
as a
of felt,
a roll
w^ere to
Duchampian-
reveal the
preoccupation with lan-
guage. Nauman's numerous videotapes and films of the late
1960s show him
exploring perception as generated by speech and action, most often in sequences that
confound narrative expectations. Video has remained artist. Similarly, his
work with neon has been
a
medium
a favoured
cern, beginning with the disarming spiral Windozv or Wall Sign (1967; Galler\",
New York), which reads
truths'. Characteristically, this
Exaggerated Fomteeji Times
'The true
artist
Museum
European
evince an exaggerated self- awareness.
Wx&i
Hand
to
As
a
such as
Mouth
From
(see Fig. 8)
galleries
was thus widely
felt
in 1972 the
Museum
self-depictions
activities
Whitney
of Art co-organized
almost from the
new, inexpensive and flexible medium, video offered these
recording their
Nauman
1969 on, he presented
and museums, and
of American Art and the Los Angeles Count)'
a large retrospectiv^e; his influence
My
Name
pieces,
demonstrated the protean magnitude of his imagination. regularly at
Castelli
Last
such anatomical casts as the punning Fro?n recent work
Leo
helps the world by revealing mystic
and subsequent neon
Vertically,
for the
constant and constantly evolving con-
outset.'"
artists a
way of
and of structuring both behaviour and space. Narcissistic
predominated
in the tapes
L)Tida Benglis and Keith Sonnier.
With
produced by two young Louisiana
artists,
their flamboyant sensibilities, they explored
poured pigment and
the possibilities of 'process'
art. Benglis's
were deliberate
monumentalize the sacred gesture of 1950s American and it
efforts to
large-scale
latex pieces
painting. Studio photographs of her echo shots of Jackson Pollock in action,
was
tv^ical of Benglis that she should have confronted the heroics of Abstract
pressionism. Both wall and floor-bound, her
enormous
With her
later
works and
config-
adoption of such materials as beeswax and
plaster,
fluiditv^,
inventing
Benglis emphasized tactility and finish in a consciously feminist manner,
even more dominant in her
their cast
new
metal successors exchanged malleability for arrested urations of mass.
plastic
Ex-
an attitude
many videotapes.
Sonnier, no less experimental with his materials, sought to incorporate the audi-
ence in his work, often by physical evocations of
a stage-like space. After
1967 his
constructions of neon and incandescent light, latex, rags and an additive, synthetic
which he mixed with liquid medium, became overtly paintColour seemed more important to him than to most of his fellow sculptors,
texture called 'flocking', erly.
while his use of both audio and video tape enabled him to create free adaptions of
9.
last
of the
artists to
Richard Seira: Interviews, Etc.
Hudson River Museum,
be considered here, Joel Shapiro,
weakening of the process ethos that
in
ig~o-So, exhibition catalogue, Yonkers, XY,
theatrical environments.
The
Quoted
after 1970.
were presented in 'Anti-Illusion'
The
at the
is a
case study in the
tangled nylon filament reliefs of his
Whitney Museum were
typical of the
10.
1980, pp. lo-ii.
See Jane Li\-ingstr»n and Marcia Tucker, Bruce NamniDr. Works from 196^ to K)"!, exhibition catalogue, Los .\ngeles Count}" Museum of Art, 1972.
Antiform: 1965-1970
131
\lew of the exhibition 'Bruce Nauman', Leo Castelh Gallcn', New York, 1966. My Last Fig. 8
Name
Exaggerated Foititecn Times
Veitically (1967;
Sonnabend Collection) is in the centre, From Hand to Month (1967; Collection of Joseph A. Helman) at far left
underlying pictorialism evident in
him
to a
were
much
of that exhibition's contents. Shapiro's rapid
sequence of autodidactic, hand-shaped works around 1970, led group of 'signature pieces', including the bird, bridge and coffin shapes that
development,
first
via a
shown
New York's
at
Clocktower in 1973. Small
in scale (the bird, for ex-
ample, was roughly two by four by three inches) and simply rendered, these pieces
marked a turning away from the generally abstract forms preferred by his peers. These miniatures were harbingers of a new representationalism that was about to manifest itself in the work of such American painters as Elizabeth xMurray and Susan Rothenberg,
as well as in that
of a host of Europeans
still
unknown
in the
time. Shapiro's tentativeness hardened - metaphorically and physically
-
as
US
at the
he began
casting simplified 'houses' in 1973. In pursuing such quasi-architectural and, later, figural forms,
he embraced subjects that superseded post-xVIinimalism.
duction of recognizable subject-matter in
much
The
reintro-
painting of the early 1970s was but
the opening volley in that medium's successful bid for supremacy over sculpture, and
marked
a
gradual shift in interest that reached
wide flowering of Neo-Expressionism. In
a
apex ten years later in the world-
its
way
that recalled the ossification of
Abstract Expressionism in the second half of the 1950s, 'process' art had
too familiar and lost the potency of genuine spontaneity.
moved
on, adapting to the exigencies of careers and to their
artists.
Eva Hesse died
years
later.
The
With
artistic
most sahent ted so
in 1970;
Robert Smithson was
new
become
all
practitioners
roles as established
killed in a plane crash three
their loss, 'process' art entered another, secondar)' phase.
and
social legacy
feature
much of the
is
of the
late
1960s
is
rich
and
far fi-om exhausted. Its
the greatly expanded sense of the permissible, which
era's
promp-
disruption and exhilaration, and which remains capable of
unleashing comparable forces today.
-*¥•
Its original
133
John Benrdsley
Land Art
Americans ness, so
live
on hallowed ground: consecrated to equalitv' and freedom, and witheld, to a special covenant between a people and their Creator.
many have
'God has promised
us a
Brooks proclaimed
in
renowned
The Knickerbocker Magazine
the sublimit}' of Nature.
It
resounds
The
tered in the roar of Niagara loft)'
Beyond
purposes.'"
existence, if we will but deserve
blood of fratricidal war; etched with the figures of
tropes of landscape
still
'He speaks
TEMPLE in which we been sanctified by
this
promise in It is
ut-
dwell was built for
steeped in the
sacrifice:
of dispossessed Native Americans; and
trails
runaway
slaves,
following the pole star north.
They were heard
resound.
the writer James
along the crags of the Alleghanies.
all
august
that, the land has
shadowed with the
in 1835.
it',
in
The
one of Alartin Luther King's
most eloquent exhortations, delivered during the 1963 xMarch on Washington, which pressed the cause of equalitv' and justice for
freedom ring from the prodigious
all
hilltops of
America: 'Let
in a racially segregated
New
Hamsphire
Let freedom ring
from the snow-capped Rockies of Colorado fi-om Stone
nessee. Let ever)'
But not only that, let freedom ring Mountain of Georgia. Let freedom ring from Lookout Mountain of Ten-
freedom ring from
mountainside,
It is little
sistent
and even' molehill of Mississippi. From
ever\' hill
freedom
ring.'
wonder, then, that the landscape has been one of the most
metaphors
emerged
let
in
American
in the late 1960s
art;
and
httle
and early 1970s
as a focus
iXmerican art of the late twentieth centur)-. I.
James Brooks, quoted in Pern- Miller, 'Nature and the National Ego', in Enaiid into the Wilderness,
New York,
1964
(first
published
1956), p. 210.
Heizer, \^'alter
De
wonder
It
that, after
\'i\'id
and per-
decades of eclipse,
it
of some of the most compelling
was then that
artists
such
Maria, Robert Smithson, Robert Morris, Christo,
as
Michael
Nancy
Holt,
James Turrell, Charles Simonds, Ana Mendieta and literally dozens of others began making art of the landscape itself, using it both as the source of material and of
meaning
for their work.
\Mth
hindsight,
it
does not seem coincidental that Land Art
now most commonly known) emerged
at the same time as the movement; indeed, notions of environmental stewardship have played an ever-increasing role in recent American culture, as thev have in global politics. At the time, however, the motivations for Earth Art were somewhat more parochial: manv
(or Earth Art, as
it is
ecolog)'
artists
of the
late 1960s, joining in a
from the network of museums and Michael Heizer, Double Xegative, 1969-70. Alormon Mesa, near Overton, Nevada. Photos Gianfranco Gorgoni
Figs.
I,
2
©
They were traditional
also dissatisfied with
- read formalist -
art.
wider revolt against convention, were alienated
galleries
with their
ties to
what they perceived .-Vs
Heizer told
it:
money and
social status.
to be the limited concerns of
'The
intrusive,
opaque object
Jo^^" Beardsley
134
Fig. 3 Robert Smithson, The Spiral Jetty, 1970. Great Salt Lake, Utah. Photo Gianfranco
©
Gorffoni
refers to itself. ...It
is
rigid
and blocks space.
It is a target.
An
incorporative
work
is
beyond itself' making in 1967 and which is most familiar from his Double Negative (Figs. 1,2) -would be composed of space itself, carved out of the material of its place. Double Negative is formed of two cuts, each and
aerated, part of the material of its place
refers
Heizer's 'incorporative' art - which he began
thirt}- feet
wide and
Mormon Mesa It
fift)^
feet
in southern
affirmed numerous
deep
it
;
reaches across
a scallop in
Nevada and measures over
new possibilities
the escarpment of the
quarter of
a
for sculpture: not only
a
mile in length.
form determined
is it a
by space rather than by surface and volume, an environment rather than than
a horizontal rather
a vertical
;
but
also a
it is
a
monolith,
phenomenon
to be experienced in
beyond
Double Negative
time rather than apprehended in an instant.
Heizer was
less successful at ha%'ing his
work
refer
itself
is
curiously self-contained, a space into which to withdraw in solitar)^ contemplation.
who followed him into the western deserts were to make more of the connecWalter De Maria, who executed his first landscape work in Heizer's company in the spring of 1968, and Robert Smithson and Nana,' Holt, who joined
Others
tion with place:
Heizer that summer in Nevada, where he was working on called
told
Nine Nevada
by the
artist in
a series
of small excavations
The Spiral Jetty (1,500 x
Depressions. Smithson's
an essay of the same name, w^as
generated by
15 feet; Fig. 3), as
his reactions to the
landscape on the edge of the Great Salt Lake in Utah, where the curving shore
ringed by distant mountains: 'As
I
looked
at the site, it
is
reverberated out to the hori-
zons only to suggest an immobile c)xlone....The shore of the lake became the edge of the sun, Jetty
a boiling cur\'e,
was thus
microcosmic: the spiral. tice,
an explosion rising into
a reaction to the salt crystals
'The Spiral Jetty could be considered one
magnified
trillions
fier\'
prominence.' If
macrocosmic landscape, then it wa'^ that grew on the jetty were formed
77.7^
Spiral
also linked to the in the
shape of
a
layer within the spiraling cr\^stal lat-
of times', Smithson observ^ed. 'So
it is
that
one ceases to con-
sider art in terms of an "object". '-
The
references to place at
multiple.
Formed of
a grid
De
xMaria's
The Lightning Field
of 400 stainless
steel poles
Lightning Field stretches out a mile on an east-w- est
axis,
north-south one, in an isolated area of w est-central arrayed in such a
under twent\'-one to
way feet.
mapping, especially
that their tips
The
form
allusions at
to the
way
a level
(Figs. 4, 5) are likewise
spaced 220 feet apart. The
and nearly
New
a
Mexico.
kilometre on
The
2.
poles are
3.
plane at an average height of just
The Lightning Field are to measurement and
the bulk of the nation was divided into an ortho-
gonal grid of mile-square sections by the so-called Northwest Ordinance of 1787.
Michael Heizer, 'The Art of Michael Heizer'. Aitfonan, vol.
a
New York, 4.
8,
no. 4,
December
1969, p. 37.
Robert Smithson, 'The Spiral Jett\', in The Writings ofRohat Sriiithsou, ed. Xancy Holt, Walter
De
1979, pp. iii, 112.
Maria, 'The Lightning Field',
Airforimi, vo\. 18, no. 8, April 1980, p. 52. 5.
Xancy no.
8,
Holt, 'Sun Tunnels',
April 1977, p. 36.
Artforii?//, vol. 15,
Land Art
Figs. 4, 5
Walter
De Alaria,
1974-77. Near Quemado, Dia Center for the Arts
The Lightning
Field,
New Mexico.
©
Most
explicitly,
lightning,
De Maria
southwest. As the piece
De
however,
Maria's
which occurs with
is
work makes reference
relative
insists,
frequency in
however, 'the light
a perceptual puzzle, virtually
to the
awesome power of
this high-altitude is
as
135
important
region of the
as the lightning':
disappearing in the brilliant midday sun and
only becoming fully visible in the raking light of dawn and
dusk."*
Nancy Holt executed her first major work of Land Art during these years. Her Sini Tunnels (Figs.
four concrete cylinders eighteen feet long and nine feet in dia-
6, 7),
meter, were set out in the
Utah
desert in the shape of an X, with each cylinder orient-
ated to the position of the rising or the setting sun at the
The upper surface
of each cylinder
is
constellations; these star patterns are cast
the tunnels. 'Day
Holt nicely
tells
is
it.
or winter solstice.
by day on to the lower inside surfaces of
turned into night, and an inversion of the sky takes place', 'Stars are cast
down
While Sun Tunnels might thus be seen also functions as
summer
cut with holes in the configurations of various
to earth, spots of
as
warmth
as
in cool tunnels.''
an exercise in astronomical orientation,
something of an earthly camera, framing views into
it
a disturbingly
vast landscape. Figs. 6, 7
Nana.' Holt, Sun Tunnels, 1973-76.
Near Lucin, Utah
James
Turrell, an artist
known
almost palpable (see Cat. 224),
way that it becomes upon framing views -in his case, into
for manipulating light in such a
is
also intent
John Beardsky
136
Fig. 8
James
Turrell, Roden Crater Project,
begun
1974. San Francisco Peaks, near Flagstaff, Arizona
infinity. Turrell
began work
Crater Project (Fig.
8),
in the
mid- 1970s on an undertaking known
so ambitious and so expensive that
around the tawny-red cinder cone of
a
it is
dormant volcano
in
as the
as yet unfinished.
Roden In and
northern Arizona he
is
fashioning a series of spaces that will function as obsenatories for various celestial lighting events: the yearly, northernmost rising of the sun, for example, or the south-
ernmost rising of the moon, which occurs
The main ing:
over even- eighteen-and-a-half years.
phenomenon known
from the bottom of the interior of the cone one
fectly recontoured, ehiptical
may
will
fit
with some
sk\^ like
By the mid- 1970s the
an arcing roof,
subtlet}* into its
thus escape the criticism that has been levelled at other
ventions in the landscape.
as celestial vault-
look up beyond the per-
rim of the volcano to see the
composed of light but implausibly sohd. Although grand, Turrell's work should it
just
incident will be the experience of a
en\ironment;
monumental
critique of Earth Art
inter-
was increasingly
being framed in ecological terms, with Heizer taking the most serious blows.
A writer
complained oi Double Negative that 'it proceeds by marring the ver\" land, what we have just learned to stop doing'; another critic, referring to Heizer's
in Aitformn
which
is
Fig. 9
weeks)
Fe?ice, Sonoma and Marin 1972-76 (removed after two
Christo, Rimuiug
Counties, California,
Land Art
137
.,^_
r"-*-
i*^^'.%
^^ t^:^"^-
^m:S.-llprX'^--;
.%
* !W1S" -••W»L;.'As-.-:-'^-S-.'.^V^V;i.C/.'. ^i^j'TlA^.^S^
Fig. 10
Fig. II
work
Charles Simonds,
Landscape
-Bodyi-^Dzi'elliiig,
Ana
1970
in AjTiveek, insisted that 'earth art, with ver\^
improve upon
Alendieta, Untitled (Fetish series),
1977; Old Alan's Creek, Iowa Cit)'. Photograph, Collection of Raquel Alendieta
its
natural environment,
criticism, alternatives to the
it
destroys
monumental
.
few exceptions, not only doesn't
it'.*
w^estern
:
By then,
in a spirit akin to this
works of Land Art had already
Europe and in the United States. In Europe the countenailing sensibility was typified by the work of Richard Long and Hamish Fulton in the L^nited States by such artists as Dennis Oppenheim, Michael Singer and Alan Sonfist. In the late 1960s Oppenheim opted for impermanent projects - drawings in snow or wheat - while Singer made permanent but very modest works in wood and stone and Sonfist worked with growing plants. Christo, meanwhile, continued his series, begun emerged, both
in
;
in 1961,
of flamboyant, theatrical projects, such
Running Fence that
it
(Fig. 9),
as the 24-mile-long, i8-foot-high
which, though temporar\-, elicited criticism on the grounds
disrupted an ecologically sensitive stretch of California coastline."
Among the most
abiding images of the less
monumental
sort
from the 1970s were
those that explored the connection between body and landscape. Artists such as
Charles Simonds and Ana Alendieta, from very different points of view, managed to
convey an awareness of landscape
which we 6.
Joseph Alasheck, 'The Panama Canal and Some Other VVbrLs of V\brk', Aitjonini, \o\. 9. no. 9, Alay 1971, p-4i; Michael Auping, 'Alichacl Heizer: The F.colog\- and Kconomics of "Earth .\rt"',.'i;rz:Tfjt, vol. H, iHJune 1977, p.
7.
^
I.
See .\]fred PVankenstein, Beaut)' or Betrayal?', Ait no. 6,
as a
system
we
inhabit, rather than as a surface
upon
Simonds buried himself in
a clav
1970, in a private ritual called Bhth,
New Jersey and was filmed enacting his metaphorical creation from the earth. He followed this with a series called Landscape Dv:elUng (Fig. 10), in which he
pit in
lay
naked
in the clay, fashioned a
landscape upon himself, then constructed upon that
the dwellings of an imaginarx' civilization of little people.
Simonds was suggesting not
only comparisons between the bodx- and earth, but between bodv/earth and architec-
'C^hristo's
"Fence":
in Anicriai, vol. 64,
Novemher/Decemher
act. In
1976, pp. 5H-61.
ture as well:
all
are different forms of dwellings.
tecture by natural analog}', in which forms
He
emerged
developed
like
a
growing
language of archiplants, then faulted
138
John Benrdsley
and crumbled characteristics
like earth.
- were
people subsequently
At the same time,
the
- replete with sexual
The
and cracked with age.
flesh that w^ithered
like
left
his landscapes
body of their creator and appeared on the
little
walls of build-
ings in inner cities around the world, a potent reminder of the alienation of
most
urban dwellers from natural cycles and systems.
Ana Mendieta's work had a series
of temporary,
once
at
a
more personal and
ritualistic pieces
more
a
political cast to
from the middle of the 1970s variously
Fetish (see Fig. 11), Tree of Life or Silhouette, she inscribed the Hfe-size
own body on rock, as
the ground. Sometimes
sometimes delineated
photographs. There
at the
is
in
was
built out of
gunpow der and
a sense
age of thirteen from
it
Cuba
set
to the
United
Some
sticks or spattered
is
a feeling
;
all
first
if to
in
of these sculptures were exe-
assuage her feelings of exile. At
of anger to them: variously scorched, pierced with
with blood, they seem to decr\' the violence done to
on numerous
oppositions - male and female,
culture and nature.
mind and body,
some important ways the dichotomy between
the
much common ground. Smithson,
for example,
between the ecologist and the
his death in 1973, several projects that
came
is
to see his
industrialist',
would use
women
and to
typically hierarchical
monumental works of Earth
Art and the more restrained, ecologically determined works
that mediates
in
these pieces survive only
the landscape, while provoking meditation
In
image of her
mud, sometimes etched
where she was brought up
States,
of the
cuted on tree trunks and river-banks in Iowa, as
same time, there
fire
In
of longing in these works: A'lendieta was sent alone
orphanages and foster homes in Iowa.
the
on
it.
titled
a false one: there is
work
as 'a resource
and proposed,
art to reclaim surface
just before
mines
in
Ohio
and Colorado.** Heizer was recently involved in such a project, incorporating five Effigy Tumuli Sculpttires - the huge abstracted shapes of a frog, a water-strider, a snake, a turtle and a catfish - into the reclamation of a two-hundred-acre surface coal
mine
in Illinois. Regardless of the ecological stance of the various artists.
Earth Art
has helped define landscape as one of the chief cultural battlegrounds of our time, in
which we are beginning while
still
to address the future health of our species
struggling to enact the promises of the past.
and our planet,
*^-
Smithson, op.cit./Untitled, 1971',
p.
220.
139
Max Faust
Wolfgang
Shattered Orthodoxy:
The Energy
of Transformation
a new millenium about economic conModern mildly absurd.
At present, with the twentieth century drawing to dawn, the ver\^ idea of 'national' art appears
and the technical
ditions
to a close
and
by the mass media have long since is accorded - at best - a peripheral
possibilities offered
created a global civilization in which the national status.
marked by catastrophes arising from national, ethnic These are signs of the panic which typically emerges in times
Nevertheless, the present
and religious
conflict.
is
new can
of radical change and innovation. Before the
institute its
own
of stable
set
conventions, long-established patterns of thought and behaviour which oppose the
dynamic of change are given
The
aspects to this.
past
endowed with an
is
those elements are revealed within Fig.
I
Edward
Philip CiUston, lii/kiug, 1979. R. Broida Trust, Los Angeles
do so
to
emphasis. There are, however, two
a fresh, radical
it
same time
illusory grandeur, but at the
which engendered the new and
will
continue
in future.
We are
new
currently living at a historical watershed, in a state where the
has not
no longer holds good- ours is an age of transition in which the parameters of the future are perceptible only as dim outlines. That the new will
yet emerged but the old
suddenly reveal
itself at a single
merely happen:
it is
a
vain hope. History does not
It is a
process involving conflicting
dramatic stroke
made by men and women.
is
with points of condensation and concentration,
fields offeree,
and moments of transformation.
part of the
x\
new element
moments of regression
infiltrating into the
mak-
ing of history consists in the disturbing realization that the future can only be planned
The more
in bare outline.
the wider they
detailed our blueprints and predictions for the future are,
of the mark. Historical projections have to be open, leaving space
fall
for the unpredictable, for things that shape themselves of their
Fig.
Jonathan
2
Borofslcy,
RumiingMan,
1982.
Painted on the Berlin Wall on the occasion of the
we
angle that
are able to discern
exhibition 'Zeitgeist' at the Martin-Gropius-Bau,
prospective elements,
Berlin
own
accord. This
means that the present is not to be taken as a given fact but seen, instead, as a d\Tiamic whole whose primary quality is energy. It is only by looking at the present from this its
contradictions and conflicts,
its
moments of consen-ation and
its
retrospective and
transformation. This calls for
an open form of thinking that does not seek to presence the status quo but willingly accepts insecurit}' - placing
An
interpretation of
throws
its
trust in the configuration
American
art since the
the parameters of this subject into sharp
all
the art of the
USA, and
of the quest.
end of the 1970s relief.
this fact has historical, political
cept that was redefined by narrowing there
is a
hankering for
identity'
which
it
is
down
on
a
of energ\^
here,
means
The
simplif\ang label
loose geographical con-
into national terms.
rooted in the
art,
and cultural implications that
are closely connected with the issues of nationalit}- and power.
'Ainerican' refers back to a traditional self-image based
as a field
'American'
Underlying
modern W'estern
thinking in the categories shaped by the nation-state. In the
USA
this
this
tradition of
concept was
burdened fi-om the outset with irreconcilable internal contradictions. The USA is a European invention, created through the displacement of Europe's geopolitical dominion.
Identit)'
could onh' develop via negation. WTiereas in Europe the relative
congruence of geographical configuration, ethnic distribution and national boundaries
and
could be taken for granted, the justify
it
in missionarv' terms.
USA
had to manufacture
The attempted
a
sense of nationhood
extermination of the Indians and
the brutal denial of their rights form the background on which this desire for identity inscribes Fig. 3
Pace
Julian Scimahcl, Ohitz
Clallcrv,
New
\orV
niirii,
1991.
itself.
As
ever\'
remnant of contact with the aboriginal population was
severed, the quest lor identit)' created a
ttibiihi iiisii,
beginning, the dream ol innocence
midst of guilt. Thus, the visions
in the
the illusion of an cntircl\t)f
new
paradise
Wolfgang
140
Max Faust
that continue to surtace in
American societ)' are not only designs for the future; they which they strive to repress. The identity of the
are also directed towards the past,
USA evolved, of the phrase
in relation to the nation's histor)-,
if
'as
peans conquered the
new
it,
if the region had had
'as
:
'as
by thinking
in the subjunctive
terms
no histon' of its own before the Euro-
if this were a divinely ordained path to world salvation,
'as
if
nation were the true chosen people. In this view of history two perspectives
converge: the one referring to
a
geographical space and
historical prefiguration
its
USA), and the other
(the countr}' itself, as the 'ground' of the
to an imaginan' space,
the severing of the umbilical cord linking America with Europe. Identit)'\ia negation is
based on the fantasy of otherness.
ture
is
the notion that
thereby forging
a new^ identit)'
that in
is
all its
its
of the comictions fundamental to itself through
US
cul-
contact with an alien world,
and leaxing the past behind.
This also apphes to 'American' parades
One
Europe rediscovered art.
The
pathos of independence that
it
continually
closely connected with the yearning for identit}', in the latent awareness
paradigms derive from European tradition.
capacit}' for assimilation
in the experimental
extent, by 'world
and transformation,
Its singularit)' consists, rather,
in curiosity
and open-mindedness,
redrawing of the parameters defined by Europe and, to
art'. If
one wishes to probe
a lesser
farther, refusing to content oneself with
identifving variants, extensions and reinterpretations, one has to seek out the meta-
and substructures of American
art,
the specific element in which the radicalization of
Fig.
4
Jean-Michel Basquiat,
Flexible, 1984.
Estate of Jean -Michel Basquiat
European attitudes generates a new kind of energ\'. There are numerous aspects to which one might point: the experiences of space, of the frontier, of unit}' in diversit}'; the national sense of missionary' purpose; the periodic disillusionment induced by the failure
of the American dream. Although
ness' in
American
this essay singles
out the element of
'as-if-
bound up with the other aspects: it constiBy accepting the condition of 'as-ifhess', by which tradition sets such store, and takes on an
art, this is intrinsically
tutes the ver}' basis of America's identit)'. identit}^ departs
from the
'nature'
complex
artificial character, as a
tissue of desires
and longings which
is
essentially
d^-namic rather than fixed.
Looking
at
American
art
from
this angle, it is possible to identity' a
nificant characteristics that diverge fi"om the
variations art, to
on the same theme, American
the fabricated character of
work of
art
by the context
in
its
which
art has called attention to the artificialit}' of
it
on the
actual process of execution,
of 'making'
is
which
is
effect,
it
forces
is
w ork,
its facilit}^
meaning
an emphasis on craftsmanship,
seen as ha\'ing
inscribed directly in the
greatness of American art consists in
ing for immediate
on the
appears. Artists themselves are regarded as
'makers' rather than natural 'creators': there
fact
series of
products, to the significance bestowed
human
The The
number of sig-
European model. In an endless
for
to surface
its
own
specific dignit}'.
meaning in its own making things \asible.
as a
and reveal
right.
Striv-
Fig. 5
Keith Haring, Silence = Death, 1989.
Private collection
itself.
The reasons for this lie in American society'. American artists have to cater for a relatively mixed audience whose constituent sections have their own traditions of perception. In order to address the public as a whole, the artist has to step outside the
where the art world is the work is perceived, there is also the issue of the socio-economic conditions under which it is produced. To a greater extent than in Europe, art in the USA has always been bound up with commerce. The work of art is a commodit)^ that is expected to prove its worth in the framework of expectations shaped by conditions
in Europe,
comparatively homogeneous. As well as the question of
how
market-place. Commercial success not only confers economic status;
it is
also a sign
of cultural legitimation.
The international art scene
of the 1980s and 1990s
is
characterized by the interplay
of conflicting- European and .Anerican - mentalities. At the end of the 1970s Min-
imalism and Conceptualism, the innovative movements of the previous two decades,
were largely played out. Especially in the
USA art was
in the
^
doldrums and showing
However, the vacuum was promptiy filled by new trends in whose impact was tremendous. The return to painting began in Italy, with artists such as Sandro Chia, Francesco Clemente, Enzo Cucchi and Mimmo Paladino, who were follow^ed by a large group, spanning two generations, of definite signs of lethargy.
European
painting,
Fig. 6
Robert Gober,
Paula Cooper Gallery,
Untitled, Caudle, 1991.
New York
Shattered Orthodox}'
141
West German painters, including Sigmar Polke, Gerhard Richter, Georg Baselitz, Anselm Kiefer, Markus Liipertz, Jorg Immendorf, A. R. Penck, Walter Dahn, Georg Jiri Dokoupil, Rainer Fatting and Salome. Both these European movements were eagerly hailed in the USA, where their sensational success, coupled with the general financial euphoria of the Reagan era, led the art market to boom: the link between art and commerce grew closer than ever before. With the work of Philip Guston, Jonathan Borofsky, David (see Figs. 1-5), the
tern,
adding
Salle, Julian
Schnabel, Jean-Michel Basquiat and Keith Haring
American school of 'New Image' painting followed a similar patnational touch but refusing to deny its European origins. These
a certain
new developments
in art
were promoted with the
aid of industrial
egies, using public relations techniques to present artists as 'stars'.
the reinterpretation of tradition - re-establishing a
dead and taking
its
marketing
Based
as it
medium formerly regarded
bearings from the conventions of Expressionism - the
uration served as the model for a concept of art that was
innovation in the traditional avant-garde sense. tinual path of discovery,
The
and
as
New Fig-
no longer directed towards
idea of linear progress, as a con-
was replaced by an emphasis on reshaping the
in the various 'neo', 'retro', 'appropriation'
strat-
was on
past, as
seen
'recycling' approaches.
framework defined by post-avant-garde and post-modern attitudes, a therefore arose which allowed artists to exploit the entire range of modern-
\\'ithin the
situation Fig. 7
Jeff Koons, Saint John the Baptist,
Collection of the
inventions for their
ist 15
own ends,
in
order to make an immediate contemporar\' state-
ment. In response to the pre-eminence of Europe in painting, American
artist
develop forms of
American
its
art
own, combining the appropriation of history with
characteristics.
Object
art,
rather than painting,
medium, highlighting the manufactured
quality of art
and
its
began to
specifically
became the dominant proximity to the world
A disparate assortment of historical traditions - ranging from MarDuchamp's ready-mades (see Cat. 19-23) and Surrealist assemblages to the aesthetics of Andy Warhol (Cat. 183-9) ^^^ ^^e work of Joseph Cornell (Cat. 64-71) -was brought together and blended. At the same time, ideas shaped by the experience of the 1960s and 1970s were taken up again and re-explored. With the realization that the significance of the work of art derives from the context in which it stands, it became necessary to see the strategies employed in selling art, in positioning it on the market, as an integral part of the work itself. The illusory boom created by Ronald Reagan in the early 1980s was followed in the latter part of the decade by political decline and economic slump, which dramatically accelerated the breakup of American society. Spectacular events in foreign policy, such as the Gulf War set in train by George Bush, were no more than interim disguises for inner weakness: the fictional character of such displays of greatness was all too evident. The continual talk of a new 'world order', to be set up and administered by the USA, was pure fantasy. Even the upheavals in eastern Europe and the breakup of the So\aet bloc failed to stimulate the forces that might have brought about a regeneration of the USA. With figures such as Robert Gober and Jeff Koons (see Figs. 6, 7), American art of the early 1980s had focused on 'internal' issues, looking at the relationship between the work of art and the world of consumer capitalism of commodities. cel
Fig. 8
David Hammons, Cold New York
Shoulders, 1990.
Jack Tilton Gallery,
and investigating the appropriation and reworking of of circumstances, however, there has latterly been ical
and
social implications
of
art:
two of the names that spring
David
a
Hammons The
tradition.
Under
the pressure
renewal of emphasis on the polit-
and Mike Kelley
(see Figs. 8, 9)
means that economic success can no longer serve as a yardstick of artistic value. Nowadays, the way to succeed is by systematically resisting success. It would be impossible, however, are
to
mind.
to recreate the state of innocence towards
collapse of the art market
which contemporary'
no going back on the experience accumulated
in
and through
art aspires. art
over the
There is last two
decades. Fig. 9
Mike
Kelley, Almost
Galeriejablonka, Cologne
l\ 'hitc,
1990.
At present,
it is
difficult to say exactly
of the 1980s and 1990s. To
identif}'
what constitutes the energies fuelling the art more clearly, one has to abandon
those energies
the internal viewpoint of the art world and turn to society' as a series
a
whole. Here, one finds
of paradoxes. In the 1980s art was hugely successful, adapting
with social and economic
stratet>ics
itself to fit in
and commanding an enormous amount of atten-
Wolfgang Max Faust
142
tion as a social
phenomenon. Yet
were harbingers of
signs of success
exhausted:
ermost
all
instead of ensuring the preservation of
The canons
extinction.
its
that remains of them in the various reworkings of tradition
shell. In its
newly revised form,
pian terms; at most,
it is
of today, modernity
is
art
of the past.
is
their out-
potential in the present.
its
An
era
drawing to
is
its
For the
y ,
^
virtually incapable of speaking in Uto-
is
'atopian', scattering
a thing
a
these
art,
of modernism are
art
close. Repetition,
appropriation, variation: these ideas suggest that the traditional verities are
still
flour-
more problematical than ever before. The question now is no longer how to make art, but whether it should be made at all, at least in the form familiar to us since the emergence of modernism. It is not enough to say that works of art still exist and artists still carr\' on working. These days, the age-old problem 'WTiy bother with art?' is no longer a rhetorical question that has already ishing, but their legitimac}' appears
been answered before impUcations
The
it is
as a question
even posed; instead, the
veil is
being
lifted
from
its
radical
of fundamental principle.
mixture of opulence and miser\' which passes for democrac}" in the prosper-
ous societies of Europe and North America, the massacres in the former states of
World and
Yugoslavia and the USSR, the pauperization of the Third catastrophe facing the world as a whole -
Fig. 10
Jenny Holzer, Installation from the Times Square, New York, 19
series 'Truisms',
the ecological
these things add up to a global crisis that
all
cannot be resolved by conventional means: the established categories of action and
thought are inadequate to cope with it. The qualit}' that nothing - not even art - can blot
in
its
was
a
it
to maintain
energy^ as
\Mth
The
societ}".
on
as a social
phenomenon
in
art has to relate to the things that
greatness of modernist art consisted
W. Adorno - 'a
authenticity, a surface
could be projected.
become
art has
presence in
- to quote Theodor
form of ersatz
lived' life
its
Seen
out.
which certain forms of experience are inscribed, enable
has such an immediate, tangible
crisis it
social antithesis to society'.
which the
to
Art
failures of the inert 'un-
the end of modernism, the fictitious character of
so obvious that the insistence
on maintaining the pretence
is
ana-
chronistic and wholly inappropriate. Drained of the energy supplied by tradition, art
has been reduced to a set of bare functions, a
commercial
is
commodity
no more than
and contemporary"
art,
a
game. Even
too - in 'as-iP terms,
becomes an empt}" phrase, an ornamental
ritual
and
critics
'as
neatly integrated into the
PR managers of local and national
by the sponsors, the
and the entertainment industn. The
authorities
petus
strategies de\ised
invocation of
present
art historians
modernism still which attempts
if
fiction
its
original im-
modern
existed.
art
Thus,
to shore
it
up the
status quo.
Since the early 1980s art has finally broken loose fi-om the ideas that shaped ernism.
The
orthodoxies of the
trine 'amiJiing goes', seen as a
freedom. However, since tradition.
Up
to
now
it
message with
shattered.
past, this
freedom remains
change. Art continues to shuffle
a radical
to the prevailing system.
The
this
question
is
now integral
ing theme has been revealed, above
all,
the stimuli that are necessary^
if
contemporary' art
familiar to us since the inception of
question 'WTiy bother with
art,
whose
Fig. II
Cindy Sherman, So. 22), 1990; from the
series 'Histon,- Portraits'.
Galerie,
Alonika Spriith
Cologne
element in the identity of the USA. than
assured.
ing anyi:hing new.
issue
With
now
is
Fig. 10), eroticism
\iola (Figs.
which
pure
artifice
is
1 is
rcai
m
a constitutive
continued existence in the future
whether
art itself
is
is
why
artists
communication
and the media.
by no
domain of experience,
this
have been searching for
new
in the case of
and the body with Cindy Sherman
is
remotely capable of engender-
the global networking of every
12, 13), reality
art as
On this basis, art acquires the status of a possibil-
appears increasingly improbable. That areas of reference: politics and
teilin-
to transcend 'art' in the guise
is
modernism. The idea of
a 'natural' fact; thus, its
The
characteristic fea-
artificialit}' - have introduced
directly connected with the habit of thinking in 'as-if terms,
Bill
tied to
quantum leap around on the
to art. Its explosive potential as an underly-
by American
tures - the emphasis on 'making', on fabrication and
means
new
being steadfastly evaded.
However,
ity rather
mod-
the doc-
emphasis, art has gained a
a positive
merely dissipates the
By embracing
there has been no evidence of an impending
which would bring about same old paths that link it art?' is still
modern have been
Jenny Holzer (see Gary Hill and
(Fig. 11), and, for
Fig. 12
Gan-
Hill, Still
of Catastrophe, 1987-88
from the video
Incidence
Shattered Orthodoxy*
Today, the real focus of art
ways
in
which
it is
we
are equal partners. WTiat
and, with
the
artist.
it,
lies in
reception. Its significance
perceived, experienced and appropriated. are currently witnessing
is
is
The
143
determined by the
artist
and the viewer
the liberation of the beholder
dream of transforming society' through art and merely one among many participants in the enterprise
the end of Joseph Beuys's
Instead, the artist
of building the future. This
is
is a
behind. Looking at society as that the orthodoxies of
a
challenge he has to accept
whole, the impression
modernism have collapsed -
is
if
he
is
to avoid being left
beginning to emerge -
now
that the former avant-gardes
have long since become deniere-gardes.
A new
art
which seriously engages with our present age of transition can only
develop through dialogue, by interacting with ever\'day
^\\\Wo\z, Heaven and Emth, 1992. Donald Young Gallen', Seattle
"-¥i
terms on which
life,
with science, with poli-
dialogue might be conducted were
and the mass media.
set
out by the poet Novalis at the beginning of the nineteenth century,
wrote: 'Becoming
Fig. 13
The
tics
human
is
an
art in itself.'
this
when he
r
HS Donald
Kiispit
Primary and Secondary
Critics,
new
Instead of seeking to forge
might dedicate
itself to
cults of believers, criticism
bringing into being
a
consciousness of
those factors of experience that are related to style - for
example, the liberation of individuals from dead forms in expression and social behaviour. Harold Rosenberg, 'Spectators and Recruiters''
It
1
may
be heresy to suggest that Clement Greenberg (Fig.
(Fig. 2)
have something in common, but in
Abstract Expressionist
artist.
For both, he
fact
is
and Harold Rosenberg
i)
they share the same conception of the
the tragicjew of American
art, establish-
ing a complex cosmopolitan identity in an aesthetically simple-minded, pro\incial
Everything in their criticism follows from this \'iew of the authentic Ameri- or 'Coonskinner', as Rosenberg wittily called him-- as suffering the same
society.
can
artist
problems of identity and adaptation or stranger wherever he
lives.
as the Jew,
This idea of the
who
is
always regarded as an outsider
artist's
fundamentally alienated place
in
America, and of America's inherent suspicion of the
it
may
officially sanction creativity), is implicit in
Jewishness' and explicit in Rosenberg's 1966 essay Clement Greenberg. Photo © Hans Namuth Fig.
'misfit' artist
(however
'Is
There
a Jewish Art?'
No doubt the idea of the artist's insecure place in a hostile America seems dated. It
I
may have
served to acknowledge the resentment and resistance Abstract Expression-
ism encountered before being appropriated by American society
proved America's greatness.- But even as
David
and
as socially
and economically successful an
Salle declares that 'to be a serious artist in
And US
alienated'.^
as a 'triumph' that
America
is
Senator Jesse Helms's persecution of Andreas Serrano and
changed much since Congressman George Dondero's
by promising to reward him
for
create an art of aesthetic depth that there
is
choice 2
Harold Rosenberg
is
it is
-
let
appropriate, shallow path. Thus, for Rosenberg, the
artist is
always in
a
comply with
way
to disarm an
is
Jew,
him
They
to
embrace him
it,
nor the
critics
who
in effect stand the
its
on
its
head: the
fame. As always,
dialectically.)
Neither the movements that followed Abstract Expressionism to
profane
artist as a
art as a 'Jewish-Bolshevik' conspiracy
enemy
society's
American
defamatory charge of 'Jewish revolution' becomes the basis for the best
For
positive use an idea that supposedly negates
or her, which demonstrates their intellectual sophistication.
Nazi cliche of avant-garde
Self.*
essence of the
Jewish situation, trapped between auto-
assimilation. (In conceptualizing the avant-garde
Rosenberg and Greenberg put into
The
a kitsch artist."
the same: to maintain one's sacred integrity or
nomy and
tests the serious artist
America makes it difficult to alone of profound human insight - by suggesting
between being an avant-garde or
demands. The American
not
less serious.
always faces a choice between being a True or a False
artist
Greenberg,
more
a socially
becoming
art has
day.'
According to Greenberg and Rosenberg, American society
American
artist
always to be marginal
Robert Mapplethorpe suggests that the public understanding of serious
Fig.
much
Greenberg's 1965 essay 'Kafka's
in negative reaction
followed Greenberg and Rosenberg in negative reaction to
them, questioned their sense of the fundamental dilemma that the serious American artist faced: to
endorse American society, however ironically
withdraw ft-om
it
into a
of art or of nature (often
and Earth critics
Art). It
a
combination of both,
was only
favoured, and
Pop Art
(as
new fundamentalism, whether involving a
how
tual light: the alienated
a
as in the
did);
or to
return to the basics
convergence of Minimalism
matter of which side the post-Cireenberg/Rosenberg
they reinterpreted that side to show
True Self avant-garde
it
side, celebrated
in the best intellec-
by Cireenberg's
dis-
Donald Kuspit
146
ciples
Michael Fried and Rosalind Krauss,
whatever attenuated form and the 'with
in
;
welcomed by Lawrence Alloway and Lucy Lippard in ver\^ different ways. These critics buttressed their beliefs by fleshing them out with new ideas that, though perhaps more trendy than those of Rosenberg and Greenberg, it'
False Self kitsch side,
were not
basically different.
Rosenberg
writes:
In the chaos of the 20th century, the metaphysical theme of identit}' has entered into
strongly since the war.
It is
from
point that the
this
acti\-it},'
of Jewish
art,
has risen to
artists
a
and most
new
level.
Instead of continuing in the masquerade of conforming to the model of the -American painter bv ac-
quiring the mannerisms of European
art,
.-American Jewish artists, together with artists of other
grant backgrounds - Dutchmen, Armenians,
Italians,
Greeks - began
immi-
to assert their individual relation
to art in an independent and personal way. Artists such as Rothko,
Newman,
Guston, Lassaw, Rivers, Steinberg, and many others helped to inaugurate
a
Gottlieb, Nevelson,
genuine American
art
by
creating as individuals.*
For Rosenberg,
most serious theme
'the
in
Jewish
the problem of identity'.'
life is
Abstract Expressionism was also 'inspired by the will to identit}^ seir.'° It 'enacted' a
.
the aesthetics of
.
.
sense of unique identity through a 'specific encounter' with an
Harold Rosenberg, Discovering
the Present,
Chicago, 1973, p. 132. Harold Rosenberg, Tradition of the X^ra; NewYork, 1965, pp. 13-22. Rosenberg distinguishes between 'Redcoat' artists in stvlistic
uniforms and "Coonskinner" artists making a 'non-sD,le' or 'nonlook' in response to a specific situation. Ironically, the original nonst\-le
inevitably
becomes codified
as a habitual
stvie. I
am
alluding to Irving Sandler's The Triumph
A Histoiy ofAbstract KxpresNew York, 1970, and Serge Guilbaut's
ofA?nerican Ait:
unprecedented
'situation'." Similarly,
immigrant Jews had to enact
their uniqueness
in order to maintain faith in themselves. Indeed, for Rosenberg, Abstract Expression-
ism was not only
a peculiarly Jewish
Arshile Gorkv', about
w^as
and
an immigrant from
Armenia, and W'illem de Kooning, to w hom Rosenberg had the most sustained commitment, was an immigrant from Holland. Jackson Pollock was also an immigrant - from Wyoming. They all came to New York Cit\', an essentially immigrant cit\^
(and
They were grated to
and faced the immigrant problem of ha\ing
one),
still
all
strangers in the strange land of avant-garde art as
new kind of w^orld and
encounter: with a
Not
dam and
only was
a
w^ell. It
new kind of art. As Rosenberg
it
it
easy to start
pattern', as
it
was simpler
'to settle into a self-repeating
some measure of
[and self-congratula-
to manufacture so-called signature art." Nevertheless, in
Abstract Expressionism's heyday the s\Tiergistic interaction of the chaotic
of New^ York and the imported Tradition of the
New was
Correlatively - and no doubt ironically, considering that
ment-Abstract Expressionism came American
self, as
the 1958-59
to
Museum
of
Painting', exported to Europe, indicated.
American Scene painting, with with
Both were
its facile
its
it
remarkably
Modern Art This
catal\lic.
was an immigrant achieve-
show^ 'The
w^as all the
more
New
American
peculiar in that
its
and general lack of expressive depth.
making them especially irrelevant. the 'massive trajectories which speed across the canvas
illustrational,
In general,
but expressed the ruptured psyche of the immigrant
field', as
artist.
in
Franz
urban experi-
The
conflict-
ridden city and the emotional conflicts of the artists correlate abstractly in their art.
Max
Cold War', Artfontm,
vol. 13, no. 9, 1973,
pp. 43-54.
Quoted
in
Dodie Kazanjian,
'Salle Days',
Vogue, vol. 182, no. 5, zMay 1992, p. 303.
See Herschel B. Chipp,
ed., Theories
of Modem
Alt, Berkeley, 1968, pp. 496-7, for e.xcerpts from Dondero's speech on 16 August 1949 in
House of Representatives about the 'horde of germ-carrving art vermin' who had been 'let into our homeland ... to aid in the destruction of our standards and tradithe United States
tions."
Rosenberg's distinction between the pioneer and the conformist artist is essentially that which D. W. Wlnnicott makes between the True and the False Self In 'Ego Distortion in Terms of True and False Self, in his The Maturational Processes and the FacilitatingEnvironment.
New York,
1965, p. 146, \MnrLicott
True Self with
'the
spontaneous
gesture and the personal idea'. In contrast, 'the False Self results in feeling unreal or in a
sense of futiHty'.
Where
the True Self brings
together experiences of aliveness, the False Self represents 'the whole organization of the
poHte and mannered social attitude' (p. 143). split, vet ironical relationship between the nvo haunts modem art. In .American art it is represented by the irreconcilabilitv" of arhol. Jackson Pollock and .Andy The difference between avant-garde and kitsch as well as between Redcoat and Coonskinner art is the difference between the True and the False Self. .As Greenberg, An and
W
Culture, Boston, 1965, pp. 14-15, writes,
w here avant-garde works through plastic values' that kitsch
Abstract Expressionist gestures are simultaneously
Freedom,
War, Chicago, 1983, as well as to KozlofPs 'American Painting during the
The
rejection of Regionalist,
overt social interest, and of American popular cul-
reification of the Ufe-world
Stole the Idea of
the Cold
associates the
Kline's paintings, not only 'captured the [disruptive] energ\' of the ence','^
monumen-
symbolize the energetic, authentically
Abstract Expressionist painting was 'un-American' in
ture,
points out,
anew in New-
Rosenberg thinks happened with so many Abstract Expressionists,
who complacently began tality
had immi-
simpler to imitate the old, as the Dutch did in 'New' Amster-
the Pilgrims in 'New' England, but, ha\ing achieved
genuine new-ness, tor\^]
begin anew'."
New York to escape Nazi persecution and devaluation. Theirs was a double
neither the immigrant artists nor the immigrant art found
York.
'to
account of Hq-o: XriV York
Modem Art: Abstract Kxpressionism,
achievement, but also the art of immigrants.
w^hom Rosenberg wTote so mo\ingly,
sionisrn,
mnemonic
traces of the Jewish
dilemma and of the puzzling dynamics of New- York. Ambiguously compulsive and spontaneous, the gestures reflect the d\Tiamic new- American situation alongside the
vital
make the work
works by creating an
'breathe',
effect of social
identification.
Rosenberg, 1973, pp. 230-1. Ibid., p. 230. Ibid., p. 231.
artist's
resistance to
sionist painting at
tion -
a
its
it.
Thus, through one and the same gesture, Abstract Expres-
best conveys a sense of separate identit}^ and apparent assimila-
cosmopolitan Jewish
achievement.
adversarial individualism, but also a certain
It
signifies
communal
spirit.
irreconcilabilit)'
and
Rosenberg, 1965,
p. 19.
Ibid., p. 17.
Ibid., p. 18.
Barbara Rose, American York, 1967, p. 204.
An Since
igoo,
New
and Secondary
Critics, Primar\'
Greenberg's emphasis on aesthetic purity and the
147
immanent of the same
character of
critical
seems remote from Rosenberg's argument that 'act-painting is artist's existence'.'* However, immanent form also enimmanent identit;^ for Greenberg, as his discussion of Kafka - the exemplary
form"'
metaphysical substance as the tails
dilemma - the same existential uncertainty and critical relationship to both art and Hfe - as the American Coonskinner. The dilemma underUnes the difference between sacred
modern
him -
artist for
indicates.
The Jew Kafka has
the
same
identity
avant-garde abstract art and profane rear-guard representational kitsch
Indeed,
art.
'Kafka's Jewishness' supphes the theoretical underpinning of the practice advocated
and Kitsch'. They are the alpha and omega of his
in 'Avant-garde
criticism,
whatever
the order of their writing.
Kafka wanted more than amthing all
art
come is
.
.
to
terms with
literally
of what
be an
else to
begin to appear falsifying to the
.
art
artist, a
writer of fiction not of oracles
Jew who looked
closely
happening to oneself as
a certain
person in
And might not
world?
a certain
Greenberg, 'Modernist Painting', in Gregor\^ Battcock, ed.. The New Ait, New York, 1966,
transcends
life
p. lOI.
Rosenberg, 1965, Greenberg, 1965,
18.
Ibid., p. 14.
19.
Greenberg, 'Koesder's
by encapsulating the unconscious dominant
New Novel', Partisan
November/December
1946,
Greenberg, 1965,
p. 97.
when they become
pessimistic, usually turn into hedonism', as in
War
post-First \\'orld
Paris, writes
Green-
post-Second World War New York they turned into seemingly 'ungoverned spontaneity and haphazard effects' (p. 210), which can be read as signs of berg (1965),
p. 121.
But
Greenberg,
Nation, no. 164, 8
'Art',
March
1947, p. 284.
Greenberg, 1965, p. 170. See also Donald Kuspit, Clement Greenberg, Art Critic, Madison, \\1, 1979, pp. 20-9, for a discussion of Greenberg's sense of 'dialectical conversion' as the basic
mechanism of artistic
'°
the one
feeling, or Zeitgeist,
to aesthetic consciousness.
valid 'abstract equivalents' for that experience.
by arguing that
of
a
'The genuine
of a certain world,"' but invents
Fernand Leger did
this
when he con-
when they made
Greenberg, 1965, p. 268. 1 am using the terms of Greenberg's discussion of Halachah. Michael Fried, 'Art and Objecthood', in
Gregory Battock,
art's self-critical its
'reduction' of form
life
completely reconciled to - profane Fried seems to advocate
Minimal An,
New
histor\''
without losing
a similarly ultra-radical art,
lish
a theatiicml relation to
...
their ability
Robert Morris and Tony Smith most
as 'in essence «wf/-theatrical,
5.
Fried, 1968, pp. 128, 130.
29.
Fried, 1980, p.
it.
Labelling works that 'estab-
in
mind""- he celebrates 'the paint-
which
is
to say that they treated the beholder as if
But for Greenberg,
to his
own
to feeling,
and
in contrast to Fried, this
would make it,
surprise, true to himself."
it
or, as
A
such art - however
subliminally theatrical.
we
say.
he
'reIt
evokes them, thus
'theatrical' effect is
only super-
Berkeley,
ficially
28.
grace', but the sacred
ings of Louis, Noland, Olitski, and Stella, and the sculptures of Smith and Caro'
making him, Theati-icality,
is
the beholder' as 'ingratiating and mediocre''"- he seems
invites the spectator to project his feelings into
depend on
sacredness.''
'presentness and instantaneousness' of modernist style 'defeat theater''" rather than
bespeak, however covertly, the emotion generated by
come
to defeat theater'.
its
mean become
reconciling the sacred and
berg subtly unites through emotion. For Fried, 'presentness
- must be true
and
ele-
profane. But the opposition he posits between art and theatre separates what Green-
strained'"
27. PVied, Absorption
reduc-
can dialectically converge.'^ Art 'removed from histon^, behind the
"fence" of abstraction, can indirectly acknowledge - which does not
York, 1968, pp. 146-7. As Fried says (p. 139), 'the success, even the survival, of the arts has increasingly to
critical
'extremes meet': a 'radically transcendental' approach to art and a 'radically positivist'
approach to
there'.'"
ed.,
simultaneously a
is
emotional fundament. 'Dissolving emotion into the abstract
were not
1980, p.
daringly explicit the 'existential
ments of style''^ does not falsify experience, but shows that art alone is true to what is most immanent - deepest - in the world in which it occurs. As Greenberg says,
to have
advance.
5.
More
the result of the work's seeming to invite the spectator to enter
crucially,
it
results
Greenberg, 1965, p. 15, suggests as much when he says that kitsch 'jifedigests art for the spectator and spares him effort', affording 'unreflecdve enjoyment' rather than 'reflection' on 'the effect' art has 'upon himself.
it literally.
from the subliminal emotional relationship established be-
tween the spectator and the work.
30. Fried, 1968, p. 130. 31.
it
On
emphasizes the
in
revolt.
26.
by bringing
it
all
same abstractness
the other hand, this
a personal, particular experience'
tion of the self to
22. 'Positi\asm, materialism,
25.
from
life'.'**
so did the Abstract Expressionists
p. 273.
20. Rose, op.cit., p. 204.
24.
from
and
p. 28.
p. 580.
23.
On
serves the self
of
pessimism' that underlay American existence.'' Greenberg cuts Kafka's Gordian knot
ReviriT, vol. 13,
21.
its
art
art.
It
...
of art.'"
veyed the 'mood of secular optimism' with which the twentieth century opened," and
17.
16.
by
modern
tendency to purity and abstractness.
between
artist starts
the investigation
tests the limits
it,
'discontinuity
life-world, freeing us 15.
Jew ever
happening to oneself remain the most human, therefore, the most serious
is literally
Kafka's conflict bespeaks the contradiction at the heart of it
a
without falsifying himself somehow? Does not art always make one forget what
possible acti\dties? Kafka's Jewish self asks this question, and in asking
hand,
But might not
....
enough? And when did
What
Fried calls theatrical art makes this rela-
tionship explicit. Fried does not address the issue of the different ways in which theatrical
and anti-theatrical
art are true to feeling
general. In any case, he de-dialectizes
- indeed, of truth to feeling
what Greenberg
analysis of 1960s art in terms of the theatrical
in
dialectizes, suggesting that his
and anti-theatrical
is
inadequate.
Donald Kuspit
14H
What
Fried
calls 'the
abstraction in fancy
primacy of absorption'*'
new intellectual
is
really
Greenberg's primac)' of
Krauss also advocates and
dress.
justifies abstrac-
tion, in different, if equally fashionable, intellectual terms: 'the sculpture
of our time
continues this project of decentering through a vocabulary of form that
radically
is
Rodin and Brancusi, by 'representing a relocation of the point of origin of the body's meaning - from its inner core to its surface - [is] a radical act of decentering',-^ and Michael Heizer's Double Negative (Figs, i, 2; p. 133) abstract.'" Just as the art of
forces us into an 'eccentric position relative to the center of the work'," so the copy
impHes that the original
a false centre.'*
is
Mo\ing from phenomenolog)^ through
semiotics to deconstruction, Krauss always affirms the primacy^ of abstraction, with
no awareness
that the issue of truth to feeling
'identification of
form and
Greenberg puts
feeling', as
here as
as central
is
Unlike Greenberg, she and Fried eschew
character.-"
it'**
-which no doubt
the apparently 'cool' appearance of post-Abstract Expressionist
emotional significance of theatre of
puritv^, is
art,
reflects
but misses the
Emotion, the rw media bet\veen the
this inexpressi\at\\
and abstract
life
its 'self-critical'
expressive aspect - the
art's
sold short by Fried and Krauss, while being
secretly central for Greenberg.
The
repudiation of Abstract Expressionism in the 1960s was correlative with the
repudiation of the concepts used to comprehend tial
WTiile the repudiation
it.
and Krauss - presentness and absorption are
for Fried
only par-
is
purit\' in disguise,
much
as
decentring extends Greenberg's idea of 'the all-over, "decentralized"... picture'-' and 'expendable conventions'"*"^ almost to a cases of Alloway and Lippard. their
own
rediictio
ad absitrdmn
a reflection
seems complete in the
on one aspect of Greenberg's
Alloway and Lippard seem to come into their own by is
it
Thus, while Fried and Krauss do not quite achieve
identities as critics (for they build
for them, art
-
of profane
histor\'.
explicitly rejecting
But Greenberg
identity'),
Greenberg:
also thinks
it is.
Like
Fried and Krauss, Alloway and Lippard deny the dialectical conversion of profane
3- This tion
history into sacred art - the inner relation of feeling and form - so crucial for Greenberg.
And
thus, like Fried and Krauss, they miss the point that art
ter of 'self-identification' for
is
at
bottom
a
the
of the
title
Rosahnd E. Krauss, ture.
first
chapter oi Absorp-
Theatricality.
Xew York,
Passages in
Modem
Sculp-
1977, p. 279.
34- Ibid.
him.
Alloway - credited with inventing the term 'Pop Art' -emphasizes the 'connections'
33-
mat-
is
and
and 'reconciliations of fine and popular
of elite and public
art,
35
Ibid., p. 280.
36.
I
am
interpreting Krauss's discussion of the
'discourse of the copy' in Sherrie Le\"ine's art
For him,
taste'. ^'
The Originalit)' of the Avant-Garde and Other Modernist Myths, Cambridge, .\L\,
in
the artwork
is
a
'conglomerate' or
disparate sources, rather than
Greenberg and Rosenberg locates
the
it 'in
...
'cluster': 'a
an inevitably aligned setup. '+' According to Alloway, only in
'are interested
the end product', the latter
work of art's
'translatabilit}-'
rendez\-ous of objects and images from
art's
unique
identity'; the
the process of work'. +' But
'in
rather than
its
former
37
Pop Art is about
uniqueness. Alloway elevates the 'end-
reproduction' of the cliche into 'the authorized expression of mankind,
common property^ that especially binds ates us
and
views art as
kind of
us together', over the uniqueness that separ-
asserts the self's authority.^ In contrast to a
a
means of socialization rather than
artists"
it
at all, as well as against the
syndrome....! was opposed to
ism',
Greenberg and Rosenberg, he
these male authority figures not because
they were male, however, but because they were
Lippard even
asserts that the first artists she
aesthetic but also in
whom
authorities.'^'
political
attitudes
supported 'differed not only in
from the Greenberg
artists
.
.
.
some of
recognized.' 41.
made
their art bad.
'identifying with female underdogs',^"
Lippard came into her
becoming
effectiveness' rather than 'esthetic effect',^"
interested in
and turning
'a
own
art's
of .\merican
by
'communicative
temperamental con-
including feminist, ecological and multi-cultural production.
Unlike Lippard, Alloway does not completely reduce
art to
1974, p.
'Pop Art:
The
A?}ierican
Ait Since 1^4^,
3.
See also .\lloway,
\\ brds', in idem, Topics in
Xew York,
1975,
5.
43- Ibid., p. 9.
44
Ibid.
45.
Lucy
R. Lippard, F?o?>t the Center,
1976, p.
Xew York,
3.
46. Ibid.
as a critic
sciousness into a culuiral consciousness'.^^ This led her to a variet}' of culturally 'comarts,
.\rt,
An, exhibiWhitney Museum
A?>terican Pop
Xew York,
pp. 119-22. 42- .Vlloway, 1974, p.
47. Ibid. 48. Ibid., p. 10. 49. Ibid., p. 50.
municative'
Lawrence Alloway, tion catalogue,
...were in favor of the war in Vietnam',^* as though this 'politically incorrect'
position necessarily
'It seems to be a law of modemGreenberg writes (p. 208), 'that the
conventions not essential to the \italit\- of a medium be discarded as soon as they are
"masterpiece" s\Tidrome, the "three great
all
self-definition,
40. Ibid., p. 209.
Similarly, Lippard's criticism originates in 'revolt against
can't like
p. 78.
means
39. Ibid., p. 155.
indi\iduation.
Clement Greenberg's patronization of artists, against the imposition of the taste of one class on everybody, against the notion that if you don't like so-and-so's work for the "right" reasons, you
Greenberg, 1966, writes and the enterprise of self-criticism in the arts became one of self-definition with a vengeance'. Greenberg, 1965, p. 153. "'purit\'"
38.
less
1985, p. 170. Krauss, 1977,
'°
an ideological instru-
ment. His ideological axe attacks certain kinds of art and art criticism rather than
II.
She has wriuen about politically orientated art in Get The Messaged, X"ew York, 1984, ecologically orientated art in Overlay: Contemporaiy An and the An of Prehistotj, X"ew York, 1983, and Mixed Blessings: -Vra- Art in a Multicultural America,
Xew ^brk,
1990.
Critics,
society as such.
ism Lippard, 1976,
is
as a
New York,
1972, pp. 67-8. Steinberg points out that the
opposition Greenberg posits between
mod-
ernism and the Old Masters is inherently 'unstable'. It is not self-evident that they have different goals, especially in view of the fact that 'all major painting, at least of the last six hundred years, has assiduously "called atten-
Robert Pincus-Wltten,
Post??ii?ii?>ialiiy//,
York, 1977, pp. 13-1455- Douglas Da\is, Ait and the Future,
New
New York,
1973, p. 169.
for elim-
democratic communication of signs held in
qualities of objects' (p. 141).
New York,
Ait and Anti-Ait
1988, pp.xiv-x\-. Rose
notes that Greenberg's objection that is
'formally inadequate'
may
V\Tiile there are
many
other
stone
critics, in that
ideas.
Whether
it
Pop
.\rt
critical writing'
.
.
in
which nothing has to be proved or and which is designed to invalidate is
an anti-humanist development.'
60. Alloway, 'Statement',
David W'.Ecker, Jerome
J.Hausman and Ining ence on
Sandler, eds.. Confer-
An Criticis?n and Ait Education, New
York, 1970, pp. 7-9. Rose, 'Statement', ibid., p.
13.
Kozloff, 'Statement', ibid., p. 69.
^4»
is
a reaction,
negative or positive, to their
'the
mandarin tone... of artistic
per-
nor directly stating
'quality'
premise underlying
'the
value judgments';'' or
[his]
beyond
'point
itself to
the
spirit';"^
or Barbara Rose's criticism of the authoritarian
character of Greenberg's notion of 'modernist reduction';'" or Joseph Masheck's essays
form
on
'cruciformality'
and 'hard-core painting', which rethink Greenberg's idea of
in art historical terms,'"*
case when, social
as
figure of American art on 'Warholism''' echoes Rosenberg's moral
Greenberg remains the seminal
Max Kozloff's
attack
ongoing subliminal importance. Certainly
with Lippard and, more obliquely, Alloway, art
is
this
is
the
conceived of more in
and moral than aesthetic terms (although both separate the psychological from
the social, as Rosenberg never does, and from the formal, as Greenberg never does).
as 'the sensibil-
justified,
criticism. It
have chosen to discuss here are those
and the 'closed formalist machine of judgment' -the 'apersonal, her-
attitude, suggesting the latter's
.
I
modernism;'' or Robert Pincus-Witten rebelling against
not be valid,
'criteria of evaluation' of abstract and Pop -\rt may not be the same (p. 47). Joseph Masheck, Historical Present: Essays of the i^jos, Ann Arbor, 1984, pp. 133-69. Max Kozloff, 'Gritical Schizophrenia and the Intentionalist Method', in Battock, 1966,
it\'
the six
subsequent criticism
art
Warholism
critics,
be Leo Steinberg arguing against Greenberg's 'construction' of
because the
describes
tends to favour the
whose conception of the art they advocate has had a lasting effect on our imderstanding of it. Of the six, Greenberg and Rosenberg remain the greater and lesser touch-
criticism. Similarly,
p. 131,
common, and
Nicolas Calas's argument that Greenberg's idea of purity implies that art cannot
achieve purit}' 'with standards used to deter-
i^6^-ig6'j.
Nevertheless, like Lippard, Alloway conceives of art
sona and psyche';'^ or Douglas Davis's criticism of Greenberg for neither defining
inating outside interference' in order to
57- Rose, Autoa-itique: Essays on
''
metic value system' - in favour of criticism 'stressing autobiography, the
Nicolas Galas, Art in the Age of Risk, New York, 1968, p. 140. Galas also thinks that
Greenberg confuses 'standards used
Lippard says femin-
art world. In contrast,
underdog.''
tion to art"'(p. 71).
mine inherent
remains firmly in the
149
her 'sole remaining excuse' for remaining in the art world, there being 'so few
feminists in the establishment'.
p. 9.
Alloway, 1974, pp- 5, 7Leo Steinberg, Other Criteria,
54-
He
Primary and Secondar\'
At
a
1970 'Conference on Art Criticism and Art Education' Alloway yet again
attacked
'elite criticism','"
implicitly Greenberg's,
self-challenging himianistic
discipline','*'
for an 'open, informal' criticism cial functions','" like
and Rose described criticism
as 'a
hke Rosenberg's. Similarly, Kozloff called
uncompromised by 'mandarin
instincts or
commer-
Rosenberg's and unlike Greenberg's. Almost two decades after
the reign of Greenberg and Rosenberg art criticism was
ows, for better or worse.
still
haunted by their shad-
Gail Stavitsky
The Museum and
the Collector
Private collectors usually acquire
account for the
earliest
work before museums. They
and greatest number of acquisitions
in
the contemporan" field - probably not because of greater
mind decides
appreciation or astuteness, but because one
WTiatever economic hope we have
lies
with state sponsorship
or the private collector, especially the younger collector
who
is
usually of the professional class. Da\id Smith, 1947'
The
astonishing growth of American art
museums
since 1870
due to the unique
is
generosity of private collectors functioning within a capitahst, free-enterprise system.
Unhke Europe, America had
neither royalty nor aristocracy, papacy nor ci\dc organ-
izations to develop collections that
would eventually form the
administered, government-funded
museums during
centuries. Large-scale collecting in
America was not possible
nomic
recover)'
collectors
and industrialization
until the period
War. Thus, America's
of eco-
first
major
were mostly self-made businessmen. They included the founders of the
country's great art
of Art. Behind tive lies a
after the Ci\al
basis of publicly
the eighteenth and nineteenth
museums
this pattern
complex
variet\"
New York's Metropolitan Aluseum
in 1870, particularly
of individual philanthropy, private control and local of motivations, including art
as social prestige
initia-
and profit-
able investment, connoisseurship and aesthetic pleasure, as well as populist ideals of civic dut}^ public
education and the encouragement of creati\it\'.
At the turn of the
centur\', J.
Pierpont Alorgan and other
prestigious, blue chip collections of historical
the standards for American ference to the
museums and
work of li\nng
artists
were to transform the nature of
European
art
men
of fortune amassed
which continued to
private collectors (see Fig.
was challenged by
art collecting in
a
i).
Their
small group of pioneers
America through
set
indif-
who
their missionary
efforts.
None I.
David Smith, 'The Sculptors Relationship to the Museum, Dealer, and Public', quoted in Garnett AlcCoy, ed., David S?}iith, New York, 1973' PP- 57-8.
Hg.
1
J.
Schuerle, The French and the American
Napoleons of An,
c.
19 13
of these zealous collectors
commanded
vast financial or industrial empires.
Their varied enterprises or inheritances afforded them the opportunities to develop and spread the new modernist
faith.
were the expatriate Stein family - Leo, Gertrude
(Fig.
their intellectual concerns, befriend living artists
The most
influential pioneers
Gitil Stavitsky
Michael and Sarah - who had become prescient patrons of Cezanne, Matisse and
2),
Among the many visitors to their legendary, art-filled Parisian apart-
Picasso by 1905.
ments were Claribel and Etta Cone, who eventually acquired over forty Matisses, bequeathed
1950 to the Baltimore
in
Museum
of Art. Another important guest was
the photographer, dealer and collector .\lfred Stieglitz,
who
in 1911 tried to sell a
group of works on paper by Picasso to The Metropolitan Museum of Art. The museum's curator Br\'son Burroughs 'vouched that such mad pictures would never
mean amiJiing to -\merica'.' The xMetropolitan's most modern purchase
at that
time was Cezanne's La Colline
(1888-90) -in 1913 the first Post-Impressionist painting to enter an collection. It had been acquired from the Armor)' Show, an event
des Paiivres
American museum
modern
that pro\"ided the major stimulus for collecting
America. This land-
art in
mark exhibition was spearheaded by the painter Arthur B. Davies, art adviser to Lillie P. Bliss and Alary Quinn Sullivan, who would later be among the founders of Xew
Museum
York's
of Modern Art.
The New York ful legal
lawyer John Quinn, the Show's main patron, conducted
crusade to eliminate the import dut\- on
old, thus facilitating the rapid
Quinn had amassed
1924,
with
art,
a perspicacious
the
all
works of art less than
a success-
tvvent}-
New York art market. At his
expansion of the
most important collection of avant-garde
years
death in
literature
and
emphasis on Constantin Brancusi. Another collector gal-
the Chicago lawyer Arthur Jerome Eddy, who became a pioneering patron of Wassily Kandinsk)' and wrote one of the first books on modern art to appear in America, Cubists and Post-b}ipressionis?)i (1914). Walter and Louise Arensberg (Eig. 3) launched their avant-garde collection of xMarcel Duchamp, Dada, Cubist and Surrealist art with the purchase of a painting by Jacques Mllon at
vanized by the
Armory Show was
Fig.
2
Gertrude Stein,
c.
1906
the Show.
Sening
Dreier (Fig.
nyme
Arensbergs' collection and
as the catalyst for the
1915 to 1920,
Duchamp
4).
Along with
as the first
-\merican
functioned primarily as a
Man
Ray, Dreier and
museum
galler\'.
and
York salon from
Duchamp founded
of modern art in 1920 in
.Managed by Dreier, the
landmark exhibitions of international modern
New
major patron, the painter Katherine
also influenced his other
the Societe Ano-
New York,
Societe
art in 1921 at the
although
it
Anony?ne organized
Worcester
Museum
Museum, introducing Dada, Surrealism, De Stijl and museum visitors. In a review of the Brookl}Ti Museum Henry McBride articulated the imperative need for a museum to house modat the Brookl^Ti
1926
in
Constructivism to American show,
ern art permanently. Unable to achieve this goal, Dreier bequeathed the Societfs collection to Yale Universitv' in 1941.
The
first
servative
permanent showcase
Duncan
Phillips,
for
modern
art
was founded by the
who opened his home in W'ashington to the
relatively
con-
public in 192
with works by European and American Impressionists and the Ashcan School, along-
Old Master ancestor El Greco. Soon afterwards, two other institutions of art opened which, like the PhiUips Memorial Art Gallerv^ were one-man operations. Amassing a diverse collection of work by Cezanne, Matisse and others
side the
modern that
was rejected
Arts in 1921,
opened
Dr
as 'degenerate'
when exhibited
in a Philadelphia
suburb in 1925.
Albert Eugene Gallatin inaugurated his
America's countrv''s
first
at the
Pennsylvania
Academy of Fine
Albert C. Barnes greatly restricted access to his Foundation after
museum
premier
Two years more
later,
influential Gallerv" of Living Art as
devoted exclusively to contemporary'
art centre.
it
the critic and connoisseur
art
and located
in the
New York.
Influenced by the considerable publicit}' lamenting the dispersal of Quinn's art estate at auction in 1926, Gallatin installed his collection as a small, informal in the
South Study Hall of New York
relativ'ely
own
museum
from 1927 to 1943. Opening with
a
precocious selection of Cubist paintings, Gallatin subsequently (1928-33)
acquired the his
Univ^ersit)'
first
works by Jean Arp, Robert Delaunay, Joan Miro, Piet xMondrian and
adviser, Jean Helion, to enter an
American museum
collection.
could challenge the Gallery- 's primac)' as a showcase of living
art,
Institute of Chicago established the Birch-Bartlett Collection in
Few museums
although the
Alay 1926
.\rt
as the first
Marcel Duchamp (right) with W'aher and Louise .\rensberg, Hoilj-vvood, 1936
Fig. 3
The Museum and
Fig.
Katherine
4
Duchamp
in
S.
Dreier s
the Collector
153
Dreier and Marcel home at West Redding,
Connecticut, 1936. Duchamp's The Large Glass on the right, his painting Tu m' above the
is
bookshelves
public display in America of Post-Impressionists and pioneer modernists, including Picasso. tion,
On the
Aluseum displayed the
W^est Coast, the Los Angeles Count)'
promised to the museum, of contemporary American and European
been assembled by W'llliam Preston Harrison. Guided by
made
R. Valentiner, the Detroit Institute of Arts had
of important
La
German
FenetJ-e (1916),
director,
its
collec-
art that
had
William
the unusual purchase of a group
Expressionist works as early as 1921 and, in 1922, also acquired
one of the
first
works by Matisse to enter an American public col-
lection.
Museum
Gallatin's
of Living Art (renamed thus in 1936) was overshadowed by the
development of a larger
institution in
New York.
mittee of collectors and connoisseurs,
modelled on such European precedents
Luxembourg European
At
in Paris.
cities. Sixt}'
galleries of
modern
this time,
Founded
The Museum as
of
modern
art
museums were
art,
whereas in America they totalled
its first
the shrewd leadership of director Alfi'ed
its
European sources
to
a
genteel
com-
located in fourteen
European museums, the majority of them
exhibition of Surrealism in 1931 and
Under stripped
1929 by
London's Tate Galler\' and the Palais de
these was Hartford's Wadsworth Atheneum, which was
museum
in
Modern Art (MoiMA) was
become the
H.
a
in
mere
Germany, had
twelve.'
Among
to organize America's first
Picasso retrospective in 1934. Barr, Jr., the
museum soon
out-
world's leading arbiter of taste, an insti-
tution that established the legitimacy of modernist art and theorv' through definitive, historicizing exhibitions and publications.^ Eunctioning initially as an experimental
temporary exhibition space, the museum did not
permanent collection
until the
1931 bequest of one of collection of 2.
Dorothy Norman, Alfred See?-,
3.
New
York, 1973,
Stieglitz:
p. 108,
a letter
founder-trustees, Lillie
French modern
art in
a large collection
Hopper and
and B
in
An
New York,
Ejfoit to Secure
of Modern Art.
1931, pp. 35-9.**
Museum
of Modern Art,
New
of
others,
MoMA's
York, 197?.
received her
purchase fund with
in 1935. Bliss also
a
presented
art, by Charles Demuth, Edward was not shared by most of the museum's staff and benefactors.
first
exhibitions, 'Painting in Paris
(1930), revealed collectors' prelerences for the
For an account of .Mo.M.A's histon; see Russell Lynes, Ciood OIJ Modern: An Intimate Portrait of the
One
The museum
its first
of American modernist paintings and works on paper. Rockefeller's
.•\ldcn Jewell. .K
P. Bliss.
donation by another founder, .Abby .Aldrich Rockefeller, pioneering commitment to native contemporary
See Appendices
out on the road to becoming a
1934 and established
of 19 December 1939 from Stieglitz to Edward
S ^,2yo,(>()()for The Museum 4.
An Aiiiericaii
quoting
its
set
development of an endowment was stipulated by the
From
critical!}-
.American Collections'
acclaimed, increasingh- val-
uable French modernist masters.
Fhc outstanding exception to
this pattern
was the sculptor Gertrude \anderbilt
Gail Stavitsky
154
who purchased works by Robert
WTiitney,
Henri, Ernest Lawson, George Luks and
Everett Shinn from the pioneering exhibition of
Whitney Studio Club
The
Eight in 1908. Founding the
provided gallery space for progressive
in 1918, she
artists,
assembling the largest collection of contemporar}' American art from each show. After unsuccessfully offering her varied collection of five hundred works by Stuart
Hopper and others to the Metropolitan Museum, Whitney founded her own New York museum, the WTiitney Museum of American Art, in 1931 In the same year, Davis,
.
another major collector of American modernism, Ferdinand Howald, bequeathed his
work by Demuth, Arthur Dove, Marsden Hartley, xMan Ray and others to the Columbus Gallen- of Fine Arts in his home town of Columbus, Ohio. Duncan Phillips also emerged as a prescient supporter of such American modernists as Dove, John Graham, John Marin, Georgia O'Keeffe and Augustus Mncent Tack. By the 1940s European and native pioneers of modernism were increasingly replarge collection of
museum collections. In 1943 Gallatin bequeathed his collection Museum of Art. He encouraged the director, Fiske Kimball, to Arensbergs, who had tried to establish a museum in Los Angeles. In 1950
resented in American to the Philadelphia
pursue the their
bequeathed collection of modern and 'primitive'
establish the Philadelphia
museum
of this period was that of Alfred ley
Stieglitz,
torical
department of twentieth-centun^ art
The
Sam Lewisohn, John Hay \Miitney and modern
Dales' 1963 bequest launched the
though
in 1949, even
until 1967.
French modernism continued to influence many
C. Clark,
of Gallatin to
Another important bequest
encompassing major works by Dove, Hart-
Museum
and O'Keeffe, to the Metropolitan
a separate
art joined that
as a national centre.
The
it
did not
collectors, including
especially Chester
art collection
form
perv^asive taste for his-
Stephen
and Alaud Dale.
of the National Gallery
of Art in Washington, which has since been greatly auginented by Paul Mellon's donations. Possibly the largest collection of European modernist painting by 1940
was that of Walter
Chr\'sler,
who opened
his
own museums
at
Provincetown, xMassa-
chusetts (1958), and Norfolk, Virginia (1971).
Between 1942 and 1946 America's war-induced prosperity^ generated a 'boom' in sales of contemporary^ art - which was relatively inexpensive and available through an increasing tors,
number of outlets. A new^ group of adventurous upper-middle-class
such as the Philadelphia
collec-
Museum of Art's long-time trustee Eleanor Gates Lloyd
Newman, Fred Olson and Alfonso Ossorio, were among the first to acquire Abstract Expressionist works. The pioneer of these patrons was Peggy Guggenheim (Fig. 5), whose uncle Solomon had founded New York's Museum of Non-Objective Art in 1939, highlighting the work of Kandinsk\^. From and the painters Muriel Kallis
1942 to 1947 Pegg\" Surrealist side
work
at
Guggenheim presented her
her
changing shows devoted to new American
sold. In 1944,
artists
European
abstract
and
Art of This Centur)', along-
whose work she purchased and
guided by curator-collector James Thrall Soby, xMoAIA acquired Jack-
son Pollock's The She-Wolf (Fig. public collection.
i, p.
Guggenheim was
institutions, including the Seattle
Modern
collection of
New York galler\'-cum-museum.
Art (the
14)
Art
Museum
gave Pollock and
latter
from her - the
also an active
first
donor of
work by him
modem
to enter a
art to regional
and the San Francisco Aluseum of
Mark Rothko
their first
one-man museum
shows, in 1945 and 1946 respectively).
Often
criticized for
having neglected the American avant-garde, AIoALA. encour-
aged patronage of native
artists
by establishing an Art Lending Library in the 1950s
and by presenting various group exhibitions of local private collections
in 1946, 1948,
modernists, the 1948 show featured paintings by Wlliam Baziotes, Theodoros Stamos and Mark Tobey. These were lent by the pioneering collector of American modernism, Edward W. Root, an art professor and critic who donated his eclectic collection, formed since the 1920s, to the Munson-W^lliams-Proctor Institute in Utica, New 195 1 and 1955. Although the majority of works on \iew were by European
York, in 1956.
During the 1950s
MoMA's
long-time trustee Nelson Rockefeller emerged
leading collector of Abstract Expressionism. Inspired by bition series, organized
Mo.M\'s 'Americans'
by curator Dorothy Miller, Rockefeller
also
as a
exhi-
developed a large
Fig. 5
front of
Peggy Guggenheim and Herbert Read a painting by Yves Tanguy, 1939
in
The Museum and
collection of
modern European, Latin American and
the Collector
'primitiv^e' art.
155
Indeed, Rocke-
tandem with MoMA's international travelling shows - has even been viewed as an aesthetic symbol of American imperialist aspirations. Another major Abstract Expressionist patron was Seymour H.Knox who, from the 1950s onwards, donated seminal works by Arshile Gorky, Pollock, Rothko and others to the Albright-Knox Art Gallery in Buffalo, New York. Ben Heller's group of monumental canvases by Barnett Newman, Pollock, Rothko, Clyfford Still and others was feller's
patronage -
applauded
in
New York's best private collection of American action paintings when it
as
was exhibited
MoMA
at
Friends of the Whitney
in
1961. Heller also
became
actively involved with the
Museum, lending works by Joseph
Franz Kline, Joan Mitchell and Robert Rauschenberg
in
Cornell, Philip Guston,
1958 and 1964 to the
Friends' series of exhibitions promoting the private collecting of contemporary
American
art.
The Whitney Museum and Milton Lowenthal
presented the private collections of such Friends as Edith
important works by Stuart Davis, and
in 1952, with
Roy
work by Milton Avery, Baziotes, Adolph Gottlieb, Hans Inspired by Duncan Phillips, Neuberger founded his own
R. Neuberger in 1956, with
Hofinann and Pollock.
museum
in
1974
at the State Universit)^
of New York in Purchase.
Another Whitney Friend, museum founder and collector of American European)
art
was the uranium magnate Joseph
P.
(as well as
Hirshhorn. His acquisition of
works by Gorky and David Smith was notably precocious. The Hirshhorn and Sculpture Garden, conceived
as a
modern complement
Museum
to the Smithsonian's
National Gallery of Art (founded in 1941), opened in Washington in 1974 with the unsurpassed donation of over twelve thousand art objects, including a celebrated collection of work
Other major
mer
by Willem de Kooning. gifts
during the 1960s and 1970s were presented by
sculptor) and Jean
collaboration
Lipman
to the
Whitney Museum
Howard
as the fruits
(a for-
of a long-term
on the development both of a representative group of works by Alexan-
der Calder and of a major travelling collection of contemporary American sculpture.
By 1969 lain,
the
Dan
first
two exhibited selections had included sculpture by John Chamber-
Flavin,
Don
Judd, Ellsworth Kelly, Sol LeWitt, Robert Morris, Claes
Oldenburg and Robert Smithson. Many of these artists also benefited from the patronage of MoMA's prominent trustee-architect Philhp Johnson, who presented works by them to this institution in the 1970s. With a collection ranging from Abstract Expressionism to Pop Art, Minimalism and Conceptual Art, Johnson could often be relied upon to acquire, and subsequently donate, challenging work that had not been approved by the Collections Committee. From 1959 to 1970 a special fund established by Larry Aldrich, the founder of the Aldrich Museum of Contemporary Art in Ridgefield, Connecticut, in 1964, enabled MoAlA to acquire work by such
Fig. 6
.\nd\' \\ arhol, Ethel Scull
1963. WTiitney
Museum
York; Gift of Ethel
Thhty-six Times,
of .\inerican
Redner
Scull
«w*^
.\rt,
New-
Gail Staiitsk)'
Americans not already
and Frank
tin
The
Kosuth, Brice Marden, Agnes Mar-
in the collection as Joseph
were donated by Robert and Ethel and pop of Pop Art' and
modish wife
See John Rublowsk)-, Pop Ait,
New York,
1965,
p. 159.
MoA'LVs Renowned as
pieces by Chamberlain and Jasper Johns to enter
first
5.
Stella.
'the
(see Fig. 6) also
Scull in 1958
and 1961.
collection
the
'mom
Medici of the Minimals', the taxi-cab t\xoon and
owned Abstract
Expressionist
\\
ork.
his
Their reputation
as
daring celebrit}--collectors was based, however, on their canny purchases of Flann,
Johns (acquired in depth during 1959-60), Roy Lichtenstein, Morris, Bruce Xauman, Oldenburg, Rauschenberg, Stella, Cy Tw-ombly and Andy \\'arhol. Ardently
committed
to the direct patronage of lesser-known artists.
Bob
Scull also financed the
De Maria and Michael Heizer. were Burton and Emily Tremaine, among the first
construction of sculpture and earthworks by \\^alter
The
Sculls' greatest
competitors
buy the work of the Abstract Expressionists, Johns, Rauschenberg and the major Pop artists. In 1965 Pop Art was designated 'a collector's movement', thus acknow-
to
ledging the prominent role played by the Sculls, Richard in the
phenomenal emergence of a
Robert
Scull's
New York
critically
1973 sale of fift\' works in
reflected the rapid expansion
condemned
Brown Baker and
record-breaking auction
a
others
st}'le.'
at Sotheby's in
and commodification of the contemporan-
world since i960. Recently choosing the more venerable American tradition of
art
museum patronage, ian
Dorothy Vogel
another collector-couple, the postal clerk Herbert and the librar-
(Fig. 7),
presented their ever-growing, premier collection of Min-
imal and Conceptual art to the National Galler\' of Art. collecting
many of the
artists
Museum and
Structures' at the Jewish
Known as the
By 1966 they were
already
featured that year in the landmark exhibitions 'Priman-
'Systemic Painting' at the Guggenheim.
'unlikely Aledici', the \bgels have filled their tiny
New York apartment
mostly with graphic work by their friends Carl Andre, Chamberlain, Eva Hesse, Judd, Kosuth, LeWltt, Robert R}Tnan, Smithson, Richard Turtle and Lawrence Weiner.
Art collecting in America originated with the patronage of an 'old money', mostly patrician generation of WASP, East Coast businessmen acquiring historical
masters. Their indifference towards itan
modern
art
was challenged by
group of collectors with increasingly diverse
income. By the time
and
critics to a
collectors
whereas
European
more cosmopol-
backgrounds and sources of
MoMA was founded in 1929, modern art in America had evolved
from the esoteric mission of a small network of ers
social
a
artists,
widespread phenomenon. \Mth
avant-garde collectors, deal-
and museums began to acquire acknowledged
a smaller avant-garde risked the
art
purchase of unaccredited contemporaries.
\Miile few early collectors were devoted to American modernism, the ranks of a\id
patrons swelled during the prosperous post-war years as the capital
when New York replaced
Paris
should like to acknowledge the help ot Xaomi Sawelson-Gorse and Deidre Robson in the I
preparation of this essay.
of the art world. Throughout the centun', some collectors have focused
many more have
on
certain st\iistic tendencies, while
tic
connoisseurship approach, suggesting
\\estern and 'primitive'
art.
affinities
intuitively
developed an eclec-
between modern,
Exemplar)- of this development
is
historical,
non-
the vast Alenil
Houston to house the diverse collection of prehistoric, Surrealist and American post-war art assembled since 1942 by Dominique
Collection, opened in 1987 in 'primitive'.
Dorothy and Herbert \ bgel, 1986
more 'on-guard' by modern masters,
this ratification,
de Menil and her
late
husband, John.
Many
other collectors, including Hirshhorn,
Bibliography Julia
Brown,
ed.,
The
First Shov:: Painting
and
Sculpture from Eight Collections, ig^o-ip6o, exhibi-
tion catalogue,
poran-
.\rt,
Los
-\ngeles,
1983; Laurence \
.Museum of Contemail Coleman, The
Museum in America, Washington, DC, 1939; W. G. Constable, An Collecting in the United States London, 1964; Diana Crane, The Transfonnation of the Aiant-Garde: The Xru" York World. ig^o-ig8^, Chicago, 1987; .Martin
ofA?nerica,
Phillips
and Whitney, have
also
chosen to estabfish new museums,
American conception of entrepreneurial largesse - whereby eventually metamorphose into public show-places.
quintessential collections
acts that reflect the
Formed during
the 1920s by private collectors, .America's
first
private
museums of mod-
ern art were small, experimental galleries, organized in contrast to the exclusionary
An
Feldstein, ed., The Economics
in
Through the unparalleled contributions of collecand private modern art collections now rival, or even excel,
policies of established institutions. tors, Ainerica's public
those of Europe.
ofAnMuseu?ns,
Chicago, 1991: Paul Gamer, '.\n extraordinan," gift of art ...', Smithsonian, October 1992, pp. 124-32; Jean Lipman, ed., et al., The Collector America,
New York,
1971; Karl E..Meyer, The
An Museufft: Poner. ^loney. Ethics, Xew York, 1979; Deidre Robson, 'The .\vant-Garde and the
On-Guard: Some Influences on the Potential Market for the First Generation .Abstract Expressionists',
Ait Journal, vol.47, .\utumn 1988,
pp. 215-21; .\line B. Saarinen, The Proud Possessory, Xew York, 1958; Judith Zilczer et al., The Advent ofModernism, exhibition catalogue. Atlanta, High
Museum
of .-^rt, 1986.
157
Maij
Lublin
American Galleries
From
Stieglitz to Castelli
With one important in
difference, the
modern
ways that were strikingly similar to
time, the focus of art
moved from
its
impulse had led to the
on the
artists.
first salon des refuses.
Durand-Ruel, followed soon
after,
emerged
art gallery
in the
advent in Europe. Within
academy and
the
forums organized by independent
ist
Twentieth Century:
in the
By
The
developing
a
official
United States
a short
period of
salon to various secession-
1863, in France, the secessionist first
modern
gallery owner, Paul
market for avant-garde
art that fed
staleness of salon art.
The
significant difference in the
new kind
kind of art and a
American scene was that the impetus for a new artists and dealers of a
of gallery came fi-om American
most of whom remained in a French academic orbit until the early twentieth century. Robert Henri was a lone exception, although his defiance of academic tradition was felt less in his style than in the way he challenged the powerful National Academy of Design (founded in 1825), which sponsored annual shows that were \'ital to most artists' surthoroughly European inspiration, not from home-grown
vival.
show
response to
them with an
so strong as to identify
earl-
generation of artists rather than with the vanguard that was surfacing in Europe.
By introducing Stieglitz
of
a
Manet and Thomas Eakins was
edness to ier
Academy from within, Henri and other memat the Macbeth Galleries in New York in 1908. new urban realities, but their st\distic indebt-
After attempting to reform the
bers of the Ashcan School held a
Their naturalism was
artists,
innovative art and changing the nature of
(1864-1946; Fig.
i)
did
more than anyone
Almost single-handedly, he turned the
affairs.
in
its
patronage, Alfred
America to transform
gallery^
this state
of contemporary art - of
which there were a considerable number in Boston, New York and Philadelphia - into a gallery of modem art. A photographer and gallery director, Stieglitz launched
his first
vanguard project, the magazine Camera Work,
served Stieglitz, as
it
had the Ashcan
artists, as a
Naturalism
in 1903.
way of breaking
clear of the
Beaux-
making contact with Leo and Gertrude Stein and taking ad\ice from the photographer Edward Steichen, Stieglitz was
Arts st)de. But within a few years, after in Paris fired
with
a passion that
gave a
new
direction to the
little
gallery he
had opened in
A show of 1905 on 291 Fifth Avenue, which would soon be known simply Rodin drawings was followed by Cezanne watercolours and works by Matisse and Picasso, and opened up a novel world of European art to many Americans (see as '291'.
Fig. Fig.
I
Alfred Stieglitz in his 291 gallcn,
York. Photograph, Philadelphia
Museum
New of Art;
2).
Both
Stieglitz's artists
Dove had been
Dorothy Xorman Collection
and patrons had
to Paris in 1908,
and iMarsden Hartley lived
European, avant-garde
bias.
Arthur
John Alarin and Max Weber were both there
in 1905
as a \artual
this
emigre in Europe. Francis Picabia and
New York,
De
Zavas, the
while the French-born collector Paul Haviland, the Alexican Marius
American collector Agnes Aleyer and the Stieglitz's
The was
I.
.Although examples of .American art
bered European
b\'
more than two
outnum-
to
one
at
the .Armory Show, the forei^ works sold best.
One hundred and
his wife,
Gabrielle, played an important role in bringing the latest art and ideas to
socialite Alabel
Dodge Luhan
all
supported
endeavours.
vocation of 291 was soon vindicated by the famous
Armory Show of
1913.' It
away from the European vanguard and promote the unrecognized American avant-garde. Stieglitz began to add the epithet 'American' to everything he did. He billed his wife's 1923 show as 'Georgia O'Keeffe American', and called the large exhibition that he curated two years later at the Anderson Galleries 'Seven .Americans'. His Intimate Gallery, a successor to 291, was typical of Stieglitz, however, to turn
seventy-four works, or roughly ten per cent of what was shown, were
inaugurated in 1925 as an 'American
sold.
Dove, Hartley,
Stieglitz himself
Room' and
featured the
and other Americans.
When
work of O'Keeffe,
the Anderson Galleries
Ma?y
158
Lublin
Fig. 2
Exhibition including work by Georges
Braque and Pablo Picasso gallen,-,
Xew York,
at .\lfTed Stieglitzs
291
1915
later, Stieglitz and several friends opened a new space. An on Madison Avenue, and he continued to show the .American artists whom he had the most faith. Xew dealers quickly stepped in to develop what Stieglitz had initiated. Charles
building closed four years
American in
Place,
Daniel (1878 -1968), a former bar owner, opened his gallery in 1912 to support struggling, progressive artists, including Charles
Daniel Gallen' had emerged polish and
Demuth and Alan
many of Stieglitz's
and the opening of the Intimate
Ray.
By 1920
the
of modernism. Although he lacked the
magnetism of Stieglitz, Daniel became
avant-garde, backing in 1917
at the forefront
artists in
Gallen,-.
a rival in
promoting the American
the period between the close of 291
He was most closely associated with
Precisionism in the 1920s and the urban-industrial themes of artists such as Demuth,
Charles Sheeler and Preston Dickinson.
One of the great landmarks of the Xew York art world,
the
Downtown Galler\-, was
founded by Edith Gregor Halpert (1900-1970) in 1926 and specialized in contemporar}- realists, such as Stuart Da\-is and Yasuo Kuniyoshi. Halpert remained loyal to
American
art
throughout the
gallery's forty-four-year histor\',
ered the doyenne of the American art market.
Much
and was widely consid-
of the art that emerged in the
years following the stock market crash of 1929 was concerned with a need to define
the national identit}' and had been prefigured, for example, by Halpert 's fascination
with folk art and by the remarkable success of Edward Hopper's watercolours of
small-town \iews Artists as
at the
Rehn
Gallerv^ in 1924.
responded to the Great Depression in
Thomas Hart Benton glorified
inald
Marsh depicted
ing this period the
traditional values, while
the harsh truths of cit\'
US
a variet\-
government
itself
to 1943 the Federal Art Project of the
life
came
of ways. Regionalists such
urban
and the need for
to play a
realists
such
major role
a
towards the
programme of
From 1932 (WTA) func-
Works Progress Administration
arts
by
federal art patronage.'
insisting
on
The
WPA defined
Despite the still,
stj'listic diversit}'.
Artists with \-isions as
at
some deeper
Guston were
WPA.
WTA's
galler)' in 1931, to
and
.-American subject-matter, yet the liberal inter-
pretation of this polic}' allowed for great
nourished by the
artists
official polic}'
varied as those of Stuart Da\as, Jack Levine, Jackson Pollock and Philip all
RegDur-
in art.
tioned as the country's largest art patron by subsidizing thousands of
beginning
as
social change.
2.
vast patronage, the .\merican art scene during the 1930s
level,
dominated by
Paris. Julien
Levy (1906-1981) opened
his
The
.\rt
Project was responsible for
108,000 easel paintings and 11,000 designs.
the 'countr\' of pragmatism'.' tion with the
Federal
well over 2,500 murals, 17,000 sculptures,
bring what he called the 'discrete discontinuity' of Surrealism to
The Hansard-educated Le\y began his lifelong fascinaart of the new in 1927, when he accompanied Marcel Duchamp to Paris
See Richard D. .McKinzie, The Neu: Deal for Princeton. 1973, p. 11, and Francis \'. O'Connors essay in the present volume.
Aitists.
was
3.
JuUen Le\y, .Memoirs of an Art Gallen, York, 1977, pp. 12-13.
Xew
Galleries:
to
make an experimental
film with
From
Stieglitz to Castelli
159
Man Ray. With his sensitivity to European culture
Levy ran what became an international centre for the latest advances in painting, sculpture and photography. He first recognized the eccentric genius of Joseph Cornell in 1932, and throughout the 1930s showed such Europeans as Max Ernst, Salvador Dalf and Giorgio de Chirico, as well as the Americans Arshile Gorky and David Hare. Photographs by Paul Strand, Walker Evans (see Figs. 4, 5; p. 33) and Eugene Atget were all brought to the attention of the American public on and
his constant travels,
the cur\'ed walls of the
galler\^.
For
a time,
Le\y offered
experimental films, screening Bunuel and Dali's suicide of his close friend
sionism,
a
weekly programme of
andaloii.
Shocked by the
Gorky and offended by the chauvinism of Abstract Expres-
Levy closed America's
multi-media gallery in 1949. for the sublime. The other great force in bring-
first truly
Lev\^ was a sophisticate with a taste
Guggenheim (1898-1976; Fig. 3), was both fanindustrialist Solomon Guggenheim) and
ing Surrealism to America, Peggy tastically rich (she
Un Chien
was the niece of the
on hedonism. She opened Art of This Century in 1942, wearing a tiny pink landscape by Yves Tanguy on one ear-lobe and a metal and wire mobile by Alexander Calder on the other in an attempt to demonstrate equal respect for Surrealist and abstract art. The galler\^ was both an exhibition space for young artists and a place to display Guggenheim's growing private collection. With Duchamp as her adviser, she presented the most radical works by Andre Breton, W^assily Kandinsky, Piet Mondrian, Giacomo Balla and Fernand Leger. Designed by the Austrian-born architect hell-bent
Fig. 3
Pegg\'
Guggenheim with
the revolving
presentation of objects from .Marcel Duchamp's Boite-en-Valise in her Art of This
New York,
Century Gallery,
1942
Frederick Kiesler, the gallery boasted curved walls covered in ultramarine canvas sails,
mounted on
turquoise floors, unframed pictures
from ropes, paintings revolving on variety of flickering lights (Fig. 4).
ings also set the
New
York
art
a Ferris
baseball bats or suspended
wheel or seen through peep-holes and
a
Guggenheim's frenzied whirl of parties and open-
world spinning, offering young American
artists
the
chance to associate with the European avant-garde. Her support of Pollock and
encouragement of Robert Motherwell, Hans Hofinann, Clyfford and Adolph Gottlieb made her the chief patron of the
WTien Guggenheim
Still,
Mark Rothko
New York School in its infancy.
Venice in 1947, only the well-born and well-connected Bett)^ Parsons (1900-1982) was bold enough to take on the difficult Pollock- as well as Still
and Rothko,
until 195 1 these
left for
who were soon joined by her friend Barnett NewTnan. From
key Abstract Expressionists formed the core of Parson's
1947
gallerv',
hanging shows and writing catalogue introductions for each other, and advising Parsons on prospective additions to her roster. less
white walls, the pared-down
gallerv^
of large-format works that became
Fig. 4 The Abstract Gallen.' in PeggjGuggenheim's Art of This Centun- Gallery, New York
•'^
With its bare wooden
provided
a suitable
a quintessential
floors
and window-
environment for the kind
element of post-war American
Mary Lublin
i6o
painting.
As such, the Parsons
gallerv^
prefigured various later commercial spaces
whose asceticism interacted subtly with the
art displayed in
Many of the Abstract Expressionists left Parsons find a
them/
for Sidney Janis in an attempt to
more commercial manager of their increasing fame and
fortune. But Parsons
(who was herself an artist) pursued her love for undiscovered talent, supporting Robert Rauschenberg and other young artists. By the time the gallery closed in 1977, she had presented most of the major artists of the previous three decades, especially such 'Colour-Field' and Minimal painters as Ellsworth Kelly, Richard Tuttle and
Agnes
iMartin.
critic Samuel Kootz (1898 -1982) began to show European and American abstractionists, taking on William Baziotes and Motherwell when
In 1945 the curator and
Guggenheim closed. Perhaps his most noteworthy exhibition occurred in 1949. It featured Willem de Kooning, Gorky, Gottlieb, Hofinann, Motherwell, Pollock, Ad Reinhardt and Rothko -
artists
whom he associated with a world of 'inward emotions
and pain'.' During the 1950s Franz Kline, Helen Frankenthaler, Morris Louis and Kenneth Xoland had shows in his galler\'. Unlike the refined Parsons, Kootz kept his eye on commerce. He scored a coup in 1947 when he returned from Paris with nine recent works by Picasso, going on to support the gallery for many years by selling the Spanish master from his back room. It was also in 1947 that Kootz presented the first Paris show of American moderns at the Galerie Alaeght, a commercially unsuccessfiil but ground-breaking attempt to develop a market for this work in post-w^ar Europe. However, American art was beginning to take its place on the world stage, and for the first time in history a large international market developed. European classics remained, nevertheless, the commercial salvation for many an American gallery, including those best known for American art. WTiat is striking about Sidney Janis and Leo Castelli - the two gallery directors most instrumental in the rise of successive generations of the New York School - is the degree to which both belonged to an archetypal European mould. By the 1940s Janis (1896-1989) had initiated a career as a curator, private dealer and art critic, publishing with his wife, Harriet, a study of Picasso and Abstract and Swrealist An. Janis's gallery opened in 1948 on 57th Street, occup\dng the space vacated by Kootz. There he embarked on an ambitious series of museum-like shows such as 'Les Fauves' and 'Futurism'. By 1949 he had begun to exhibit art that made the gallerv^ a focus of Abstract Expressionism. With the exhibition 'American Vanguard xArt' of 1952-53, Janis became identified with figures such as Baziotes, de Kooning, Pollock, Gottlieb, Kline, Rothko and Motherwell. The gallery never had more than nine American artists at one time, since Janis, like Kootz, needed to sell classic European art in order to survive. But things had begun to change by 1953, when de Kooning's show of aggressive paintings of women sold out, netting about $ 14,000. Canvases by Pollock were selling for S 5,000 to $ 8,000 just before his death
(The national mean income at the time was about $ 2,800 per year.)'^ After the Second World War the Italian-born Leo CasteHi {b. 1907) started
in 1956.
his
career as perhaps the most influential art dealer of the twentieth centur}-, his nascent interest in
contemporary
couple finally settled in ist
art
guided by his Rumanian wife, Ileana
New York in the
late 1940s,
works acquired largely through contacts formed during
Paris gallery^ in the 1930s. Finding this galleries as his eye to
American
art.
artists as
WTien the
a brief involvement
Curt Valentin, Pierre Matisse and Valentine Dudensing,
with
a
art
on
a
par with the European avant-
when he opened a gallery in the The strengths of de Kooning, Poland David Smith were demonstrated when their work was placed alongside first
room of his East 77th
5.
paintings by artists such as Leger, exhibition of that
first
6.
exhibition Castelli held Street house in 1957.
Mondrian and
year which established the direction Castelli was to take:
'New
O'Dohert)-, Inside the White Cube, Santa Monica, 1986. See Grace Glueck, 'Samuel M. Kootz Dead 83: An Acti\-ist for American .^rt', SriV York Tinies, 9 August 1982. See Diana Crane, The Transfonftatioi of the Avant-Garde: The Nrw York Ait World, ip^fo-Sy, Chicago, n. d.
7.
Quoted
in
{c.
New York,
at
1987).
Laura de Coppet and
The Alt Dealers, 8.
Picabia. It was, however, the final
Bern- Parsons, see Lee Hall, Bett}' Parsons: New York, 1991. On the
aesthetics of the gallery^ en\'ironment, see Brian
Castelli turned
Gorky and Rothko with such post-war
On
Atrist, Dealer, Collector,
Jean Dubuffet and Pierre Soulanges.
garde also inspired the living
4.
In 1950 he and Janis assembled an exhibition pairing the
This desire to place American contemporary^
lock
1914).
market dominated by such more established
Abstract Expressionists de Kooning, Pollock,
French
{b.
CastelH sold European modern-
.\lan Jones,
1984, p. 142.
Quoted in Cahan Tomkins, 'Profiles: A Good Eye and a Good Ear', New Yorker, 26 May 1980, p. 41.
Galleries:
Jasper Johns's first exhibition, at the Fig. 5 York, 1958 Castelli Gallery,
From
Srieglitz to Castelli
i6i
Leo
New
Work' included Jasper Johns and Robert Rauschenberg, the tw o artists with whom his career is most closely identified, and announced Castelli's unfailing s^anpathy with what was soon to emerge as Pop Art. Earlier that year, an encaustic painting by Johns included in a show assembled by the art historian Meyer Schapiro at the Jewish Museum had caught the dealer's attention. Johns's first one-man show, held at Castelli's in
in Castelli's
January 1958 (Fig. 5), instantly catapulted the artist to fame. It was also, own words, 'probably the crucial event in my career as an art dealer,
and... an even
more
crucial
one
for art history'." Johns's Target with
Four Faces
appeared on the cover ofAjtnews and Alfred Barr purchased four paintings for
Museum
of Modern Art, Target with Four Faces
Castelli
had been familiar with Rauschenberg's work well before
with Johns. Betty Parsons's exhibition of Rauschenberg's in 195 1
The
among them.
had prompted Castelli to include the young
his
involvement
now famous white
paintings
the 'Ninth Street Show'
artist in
that he helped to organize later that year. Rauschenberg's series of red paintings
shown telli
Charles Egan's Gallery in 1954 (see Cat. 135) served only to confirm Casin his opinion of the artist's originality. However, the Pop artist's first show at at
Castelli,
mounted
just
two months
after Johns's,
only managed to provoke
Yet by the following year, Castelli had succeeded in placing in a public collection, selling Migration to the
museum
at
a
\isitors.
work by Rauschenberg
Cornell Universit)^.
of the historical moment. movements emerging and try to
Castelli's talent lay in his ability to grasp the significance
He has
defined his purpose simply, stating 'you spot
pick the best practitioners'.''
were made under Frank
Stella
who had
The
reputations of most of the major artists of the 1960s
Castelli's guidance.
He
established the careers of
Cy Twombly,
and Roy Lichtenstein, before enhancing the standing of Andy Warhol,
turned to Elinor
Ward
at the Stable Caller)'
and James Rosenquist, when the
following a rejection ft-om Cas-
Green Gallery in 1965. With his first exhibition of Claes Oldenburg in 1974, Castelli completed his group of Pop celebrities. Ellsworth Kelly, whom he took on from Janis at the same time as telli
in 1964,
latter left the
Oldenburg, was something of an anomaly in the gallen's circle, for painters concerned primarily with colour - Morris Louis, Kenneth Noland, Helen Frankenthaler
and others - showed up-town with Andre Emmerich. Castelli has always professed to have
no
interest in the business of art,
his willingness to help other dealers, artists, critics
early years he helped to
change the American
and curators
galler\-
is
and indeed,
legendary. In the
system bv introducing
a
.Maty Lublin
i62
European-u-pe retainer (monthly wages advanced against royalties from enabling his
artists to
concentrate exclusively on their
innocence has revealed what can only be considered
art.
friture sales),
Often, Castelli's seeming
canny sense of the interplay
a
museum. WTien .Alfred Barr wished to acquire Stella's black painting The Mmriage of Reason and Squalor (Cat. 155) for The Museum
betAveen the art market and the large
of
Modern Art
lowered the price from S 1,200 to S700, enabling
in 1959, CastelH
Barr to circumvent the disapproval of the museum's trustees and purchase the work
\nthout the consent of the board.
This generosit)' has frequently worked to
advantage.
Castelli's
He
has been
extremely shrewd in his development of a network of contemporary dealers, increasing the status of his
York
Although
area.
by pro\iding
artists
accessibilit}' to collectors
such as Kootz had tried to develop
earlier dealers
market for American Abstract Expressionists, former wife, Ileana Sonnabend,
outside the
who
it
was
a
New
European
Castelli, in partnership
with his
successfully broke through the barrier of
Euro-
WTien Sonnabend opened her gallen' in Paris in 1962, she showed mostlv This exposure to European museum directors, curators, journalists and collectors proved immensely important, placing Pop Art at the centre of the centrism.
Castelli artists.
international scene.
Other
been instrumental
talents have
1926) and Richard Bellamy front of the art market. Voice,
had established
{b.
By 1958 Karp, who
galler\''s
Karp
{b.
position at the fore-
started out as an art critic for the Village
world by presenting the sculpHappenings of Allan Kaprow in the elegant, up-
his place in the avant-garde art
ture of John Chamberlain and the
tow^n galler\^ of
in Castelli's rise to the top. Ivan
1924) helped secure the
A lartha Jackson.
He went on
to
become
Castelli's galler\' director, a
momentous years of 1959 to 1969. Karp's outspoken, more elegant, European charm, and the New
position he held during the
aggressive personalit}' offset Castelli's Yorker's cessful
enormous
skill at
manipulation of
generating press commentar\' proved decisive to the suc-
critical
opinion regarding the
gallery's artists. Eventually,
Karp assumed responsibility for the important and often daunting task of viewing the work of idealistic young painters for his employer, who preferred to adAise collectors and curators. This commitment to up-and-coming artists became the focus of the eclectic O.K. Harris Gallen, which Karp opened in October 1969. After five years as director of the Hansa Galler\', an artists' co-operative, Bellamy opened the loosely run Green Galler\- in i960 with funding from the taxi magnate and collector Robert
Scull.
Unlike
Castelli,
Bellamy selected
his artists
by personal
preference and in recognition of their pressing need for exhibition space. ter cast figures of George Segal, the
boards of James Rosenquist, the constructions of Mark
di
to
work
it
succumbed
Many dealers who
drawing the older
own
Xauman later
bill-
all
presented at the Green
to financial difficulties in 1965. Bellamy had continued
closely with Castelli,
Richard Serra, Bruce
plas-
Suvero and the Minimalist
works of Donald Judd, Dan Ela\in and Robert Alorris were Gallery before
The
multi-media creations of Lucas Samaras, the
dealer's attention to, for example,
and Keith Sonnier.
became prominent worked
for established galleries before
Jim Dine and Karp Robert Indiana their first one-man shows when he took over from at the Martha Jackson Galler\' in i960. But it was W eber's association with the \lrginia Dwan Galfinding their
lery,
whose
until
work
its
place in the art world.
director he was
closure four years
artists
Weaker
De
John \^eber
from 1967, when later,
it
{b.
1932) offered
moved from Los Angeles to New York,
that fostered his close identification with the Earth-
Maria, xMichael Heizer and Robert Smithson,
as well as the
Minimalists Sol LeWitt and Robert R\Tnan. In 1971
Weber opened
the building in
his
own
located. Paula Cooper,
whose
had opened her gallery in
this
420 West Broadway in SoHo, and Sonnabend galleries were also
exhibition space at
which the more renowned artists
Castelli
included Jonathan Borofsk}' and Joel Shapiro,
former industrial area of lower Manhattan by 1968, but
was with the inauguration of the 420 building that the contemporary art scene moved from up-town to down-town. Soon after, SoHo emerged as the centre of the
it
international art world.
Galleries:
The young dealer Mar\^ Boone
(b.
From
Stieglitz to Castelli
163
1951) began her rise to a position of power
when
she took a space at the 420 building in 1977. Perhaps reacting against the reification
Marden and Dorothea Rockburne, with Bykert Gallen^, Boone turned towards rep-
she found in the Minimalist painters Brice
whom
she had worked at Klaus Kertess's
resenting art that was
more emotional and
painterly.
She soon emerged
as the
key
dealer for Neo-Expressionism. \^Tiile promoting her male-dominated stable of art stars,
who
included Ross Bleckner, Eric Fischl, David Salle and Julian Schnabel,
Boone became
part of the media-orientated art
boom
of the 1980s. She assumed the
198 1 she
queen of SoHo, inspiring endless interviews and press cov^erage. In combined forces with the still-dominant Castelli to show the works of
Schnabel,
a joint effort that
role of reigning
standing as
furthered Boone's ascendancy while confirming Castelli's
a leading force in the market.
Part of the reason for the power of the art dealer in the decades following i960
may
New York's
museums. W^th the exception of sev-eral ground-breaking exhibitions, The iMuseum of Modern Art, the Guggenheim Museum and the \Miitney Museum of American Art failed to focus consistently on dev^eloping trends and new talents, leaving responsibilit}' for this to galleries and alternativ^e spaces. Perhaps this has been the case ev^er since Durand-Ruel supported the French Impressionists in the late nineteenth centur\\ The American dealer's place in the art world can best be summed up by recalling a comment made by that most famous of Americans in Paris, Gertrude Stein. When Picasso boasted to her about a forthcoming exhibition of his work at The Museum of Alodern Art, Stein retorted have been
with
a
a lack
of direction in
devastating 'no
of avant-garde art in
museum
can be modern'. This certainly applies to the fortunes
New York, w here it was
left to a select
group of knowledgeable
and perceptive dealers to shape the development of American centur\^
art in the twentieth
i65
Caiter Rntdijf
The
'The Body Electric': in American Art
In
November
igj ^A?lforiim magazine published a colour photograph of the sculptor
Lynda Benglis
in the nude.
decidedly feminine, the
arched -
Erotic Dimension
a sexy
Her
artist's
skin looks well tanned and liberally oiled. Slim yet
body
is
arranged in
a
hip-slung pose, with back
contrapposto. She has cut her hair short and greased
it
The
back.
pression on her lips hovers part-way bet\\'een a pout and a sneer, and there
is
From
sion to Lolita in the white-rimmed sun glasses that hide her eyes.
an
ex-
allu-
Benglis's
crotch extends a long and meticulously detailed dildo, held in place by her right hand.
Intended to
illustrate
an essay on her sculpture,
thetic phallus so scandalized the editors of
advertising pages.'
With her
that.
Nowadays,
Benglis's flirtation with
and quirky interlude in
as a short
this portrait
of the
pornography
long and successful career, yet
a
artist
with a syn-
Aitfonmi that they banished is
it
it
to the
remembered
was more than
precedent-setting dildo, she prepared the American art world for
by
sexually explicit images
Koons and Cindy Sherman.
who
artists
flourished in the 1980s - Eric Fischl, Jeff
Pictures of Koons assuming self-consciously erotic poses
with the Italian porn star Cicciolina show an obvious debt to Benglis.
More
subtly,
Benglis's hermaphroditic charade of 1974 illuminates the sexualit)^' lurking in the art
of certain predecessors -Jackson Pollock, in particular. In an art world scaled to the swagger of figures such as Pollock and \^'illem de
Kooning, question:
said Benglis, art
is
about
'all
territory',
and there
your floor
that establishes your presence?
Expressionist,
macho,
As Benglis saw it, American
sexist game'.'
Her male
is
product of a 'tough'
a
only one pertinent
sensibility,
was
art
a 'heroic, x\bstract
colleagues tended to see
way, though they shrugged off her accusator}^ tone. Taking art
is
How big is the zone you capture and occupy with your painting, sculpture, video piece, your public persona? How powerful is the image
'How big?'
it
as
it
the
same
axiomatic that serious
they expected the serious
artist to
show mas-
culine aptitudes, temperamentally and even physically.
Painting fi^om the shoulder, not the wrist, de Kooning gigantified the pictorial architecture that he had inherited from the School of Paris. Undeniably, there athletic bravura in the (see Cat. 97, 98)
he painted in the early 1950s. Evoking demonically powerful
males, the artist put ject
how
all
his strength
flirted
two-fisted tough
compared the just as well
guy
with prettiness. persists.
Many
Robert Pincus-Witten, 'Lynda Benglis: The Frozen Gesture' (1974), in The Nev: Sculpture nj6^-i()-jy. Beraeeu Geo?tietiy
New
exhibition catalogue,
Museum
ot
American
2.
York,
Whitney
Art, 1990, pp. 310-13.
Benglis's portrait appeared
November 1974
and Gesture,
on
p. 7
of Ajrforuf/is
issue.
Lynda Benglis, quoted
in
Pincus-Witten,
op.cit., p. 312. 3.
Patsy Southgate, quoting J»ckson Pollock, in Jeffre\' Potter, 7b
A
I
loleiit
Biogi-aphy ofJackson Pollock, p. 88.
Grave:
New
An
this
metaphor,
mocked
the image of the
commentators, the
a
and beyond, de
New York painter
artist
fe-
his sub-
as a
among them, have
He could
a
Pollock drip painting looks like the product of seminal image (see Fig.
the figure of the toweringly phallic
ninity she suggested that
we
artist,
2, p. 80).
With her
dildo,
and with her naked femi-
are too quick to assign a male nature to art
made with
was with gestures more sweeping than Pollock's that she made her far from macho floor sculptures - puddles and heaps of hot pink and green latex. Approached from the direction of these flamingly sensuous objects, his
vigorous gestures. After
all, it
poured paintings seem vigorous but not slashingly aggressive. Look past the image of Pollock as the he-man artist and you see that certain passages in his work are gorgeous,
Oral
York, 1985,
Still,
from
trajectory of Pollock's flung paint to the arc of a male's urine.-
explosively masculine energies 1.
display. Yet his colours learned
have noted that his method mimics ejaculation too.
Introduced by
Benglis
on
to be lush and, as his career lengthened into the 1960s
Kooning often
is
brushwork that churns over the surfaces of the Woman pictures
called
if
He was capable of preciosity, even, as were all the heroes of the soYork School's founding generation - de Kooning, Franz Kline, Robert
brash.
New
Mothci-well. Like Benglis's dildo, the hypcr-masciilinit)- of American art and artists
is
1
66
fake, a
Caiter Ratclijf
product of make-believe. At their strongest, works of American
sensuality' prior to the social construction
Among Buren,
crowd of Pollock's sculptural descendants
the milling
who
art aspire to a
of gender.
Richard Van
is
achieved flashy, theatrical effects by covering walls with poured and
spangled bits of fibreglass. Rafael Ferrer smeared walls with wide swaths of grease, as
an adhesive for handfuls of hay, and Barry- Le Va scattered
on
materials
guided only by the most
galler\' floors,
all
manner of mundane
On
flexible protocols.
materials touched by an expansive impulse evanesce, as
when
xAlan Saret's
occasion,
seemingly
casual tangles of wire dissolve into clouds of light.^ This art surges and flows and at
times writhes with a manifestly physical pleasure.
It
s\Tnbolizes the happily poly-
morphous body, at once enveloped and enveloping. Though it feigns mindlessness on occasion, art of this sort can betray something like wit. Until the waters of Utah's Great Salt Lake submerged it, Robert Smithson's The Spiral Jetty (Fig. 3, p. 134) made a Pollock-styde gesture at the scale of the far western desert. Built in 1972, this rock a
length of 1,500
scape. W'ith etrate the
feet.
and gravel earthwork coiled over the
Turning in on
itself, it
same
making The
can
a vortex
direction reversed, Svaixhson's Jetty
its
lake's surface to
designed to engulf the land-
became
a projectile
ready to pen-
immensit}'. At once vaginal and phallic, this large sculpture
small joke about the mutabilit\' of gender. in
was
Beyond the joke
made
a
the sculptors faith that,
is
and
Spiral Jetty, he found unit\- with matter, space
light
on an xAmeri-
scale.'
To
America is a grandiose and sexoially consummating the union, who or what plays which role? No artist has spoken direcdy of the experience. To hear it discussed, we need to attend to Walt WTiitman, whose blending with America began with a happy image of himself as 'a kosmos, of Manhattan the son, /Turbulent, fleshy, sensual, eating, identify oneself with the immensity' of
ambiguous
sort of nationalism. In
drinking and breeding.'
T) extend own
to further elaborations of his
'And the good or bad
I
this self-regarding pleasure,
being. 'In
say of myself
I
all
my palms
I
he turns to others
in
its
as
see myself, he announces,
say of them.' Feeling that he simply
American people, WTiitman embraces the land gaps, /I skirt sierras,
people
vastness:
'my elbows
is
the
rest in sea-
cover continents.""
New World
recurs in the art of Mars-
den Hartley, Arthur Dove and Georgia O'Keeffe, painters
whom we meet on the way
This feeling of orgasmic oneness with the
back from IMiitman's century' to our own. Granted, O'Keeffe insisted on not drawing equations between female anatomy and natural things, especially flowers. Yet in
her pictures of
irises
and other,
less easily identified varieties, petals are
voluptu-
By irresistible implication, the unseen interior of an O'Keeffe blossom is vaginal. Her flower pictures had a scandalous allure in the 1920s and, half a century later, made her a feminist hero. Since the 1970s her stature as a political figure-head has grown so steadily that it is difficult to see how much she has in common with male contemporaries such as Dove and Hartley. ously labial (see Fig.
Though
alert to
i, p.
47).
4.
Cubist and Expressionist innovations in Europe, these American
For a suney of these episodes, see Alarcia Tucker and James Alonte, Anti-llliisioii: Procedures/Materials, exhibition catalogue,
modernists never tried to maintain properly avant-garde allegiances to one style or another.
Remaking and mingling the shapes of observed
things.
Dove
abstraction (see Cat. 33, 34). Instead of detailing a place, he evoked
arrived at
its
weather,
drawing no distinction between external conditions of sun or rain and the inward
mate of his
feelings. In his late,
York, WTiitney
schematic manner Hartley frequently painted
Each object of his
affection
\\ alt
New York,
pling with the presence traditionally called 'Nature'.
there
is
always a victor: the
scape and thus indexes
it
artist,
who
The
is a
title
promiscuous grapis
friendly, yet
You see this wide, urgent embrace in the art of O'Keeffe and Dove and other American painters of their time, among them Charles Burchfield and John Marin. Because WTiitman and Pollock and so many of their descendants also display this exu-
poem
'I
Sing
The Body
Electric' (1855);
ibid., p. 127. 7.
Ralph \\'aldo Emerson, 'Nature' (1849), in Joel E?>/ersoii: Essays aud Lectures, New
Porte, ed.,
imprints his presence on the American land-
to the passionate body.
(1855,
1982, pp. 206, 210, 219. The quotation in the of the present essay is taken from Whit-
was the moment-
struggle
1979, pp. 109-16.
Whitman. 'Song of Myself
man's
ary occasion for a persistent, pan-sexual yearning. His art
in
1891-92), in Justin Kaplan, ed., Walt Wlntmau: Co7?iplete Poetiy and Collected Prose, New York,
with pictures of the Maine coast, he gave to rocks and clouds the same rapturous, flesh.
New
.\rt,
Robert Smithson, 'The Spiral Jetty' (1972), The Writ'nigs ofRoheit Smithson, ed. Nancy Holt,
6.
ages to the fishermen of Maine. Alternating these expressions of homosex^ual love
brooding care that he lavished on
of American
1969. 5.
cli-
hom-
Museum
8.
York, 1983, pp. ID, 14. Barnett Newman, respectively 'The First
Man
Was an .\rtist' (1942) ^"*^ '^\\^ Sublime is Now' (1948), in John R O'Neill, ed., Baniett Xe-d-?fnjii:
Selected Writings
\brk, 1990, pp. 158, 173.
and
IntercirdS,
New
The
berant pan-sexuality,
Erotic Dimension in American Art
begins to look like the essentially American
it
should not overlook the American inclination to be chaste. This
trait. is
167
However, we
another facet of
same pervasive awareness of the body. In a carnal spirit WTiitman embraced an infinitely large idea of America. Though Ralph Waldo Emerson's idea of his nation w^as as grand as WTiitman's, and his the
embrace
he favoured vision over touch. With his sensual urges spiritualized,
as wide,
Emerson described himself as scape.
As
a 'transparent eyeball' adrift
'the currents of the Universal Being' flow
above the American land-
through him, he becomes
son became exceedingly sensitive to Declaring himself as
a
a
light,
century later that 'the
first
master of the American
from our eyes
'the nostalgic glasses
which he
called 'the first of painters'.'
man was
an
of
history^'
Barnett
artist',
light, the spiritual
'the
Emer-
lover of uncontained and immortal beauty'. Sustaining his love through vision,
Newman
cast
illumination that removes
and reveals 'our relationship to the
absolute emotions'." His wide fields of luminous colour (see Cat. 107-12) promulgate
the faith that, in the cessful painting
is
New W'orld,
less
language to enunciate. canvases of
art
an image than
A
and the a
artist are
Mark Rothko
2
at the
Rolicrt
Morns,
l-'ustcr tor liis cxliibition
Castelli-Sonnabend
Galler\',
New
Under CK^ord
(see Cat. 113 -18).
New
Still's
light
fills
the
agitated touch,
York School sublime shows
ethereal in comparison to \ATiitman,
Emerson looks
its
sybaritic
beside the nineteenth-century sectarians called 'Shakers'. Strictiy celibate, these rural
York,
1974
a suc-
(see Cat. 103-6).
Though he was Fig.
Newman,
melancholy variant of the same American
such radiance turns melodramatic and the
Gothic shadows
renewed. For
presence that reveals truths too elemental for
Utopians practised a severe style of carpentry that has attracted
contemporary American tical
204).
artists.
forms of Shaker furniture
Though he
Donald Judd,
as a
precedent for his Minimalist boxes (see Cat. 202,
often covers these metal objects with coats of lush colour, their prim
forms give them an aura of simple American
virtue.
ness, that earnest clarity, in Minimalist sculpture
There
coffin-like, the largest of
them seem
are variants of that prim-
by Carl Andre, Sol LeWitt and
Robert Morris, though the grey boxes Morris made Vaguely
many admirers among
in particular, has cited the plain, prac-
in the
less chaste
mid-1960s stand
apart.
than numb.
Doting on death, Morris does not deny sensuality so much
as inflict
it
with
a chill.
Particularly cold seasons freeze his images in sexually \-iolent postures. In 1974, the
year of Benglis's portrait with dildo, Morris appeared on an exhibition poster naked
and statuesque in
a helmet,
dark glasses, a spiked metal collar and chains (Fig.
apocalyptic pictures of the next decade prophesy universal violence. This pan-sexTjality in a sado-masochistic tory^ light
Robert Rauschenberg, Monogram, 1955-59. Mociema Aluseet, Stockholm
Fig. 3
turns cruel and Pollock's
is
2).
His
American
mood. In Morris's apocalypse Newman's unbounded energies become destructive.
revela-
i68
Caiter Ratdiff
The American
taste tor absolutes
is
strong but never absolute. Early in the 1950s
Robert Rauschenberg made all-black and all-white paintings. Soon, though, he was loading his canvases with pictorial incident and found objects: de Kooning-style
brush-marks, scraps of newsprint and lumber, fragments of furniture, and what not. Splashing the quilts and sheets of Bed
(Museum of Modern
Art,
New
York) with
shrieking colour, Rauschenberg evoked much, from nightmares to sexual assault. In Monogi'dJ}! (Fig. 3) with
its
billy
goat stuffed through the tight ring of a car tyre, there
rebus of penetration to be read.
is a
The commercial
technique of photographic silk-screening encouraged Rau-
schenberg to flood his canvases with pictures gathered from
from the
art
and through the viewfinder of
television screen
books and magazines, his camera. In Barge
(1962-63; National Gallery of Art, Washington) the curves of
mimic the haunches of Velazquez's Rokeby bits
of images mirror,
hke
a big
jostle
and
infiltrate
Pollock canvas, potentially
a
super-highway
Venus. All across this 32-foot-long canvas
one another, churning up
a field that feels,
infinite. life,
Rauschenberg drew
artists.
Coolly, Jasper Johns
Ecstatically splashing in the image-currents of ordinary
attention to subjects that had gone unseen by ambitious
did the same, and soon the Pop artists had appeared. In 1961 Tom Wesselmann launched his series Great American Nudes (see Fig. 4) - anonymous female sex objects on display in tableaux accented by images of consumer products. These paintings and wall sculptures are as bluntly erotic as skin-magazine centrefolds, almost. Claes
Oldenburg's soft sculptures are more allusive (see Cat. 170-2). Like household objects in form, they have the
weight of flesh. Sometimes engorged but usually
flaccid, these
appliances and plumbing fixtures appear to be caught in an endless round of sexual
excitement and exhaustion. Oldenburg gets
at the obsessions
and disappointments
that drive consumerism.
In Oldenburg's version of
no
satire,
Pop Art
lurks a quirky impulse towards satire.
only obsession, in the peculiarly chaste art of Andy Warhol. His
itive pictures
There
flat,
is
repet-
of stars such as Marilyn Monroe, EKis Presley and Jackie Kennedy
promulgate an aesthetic of the crush - the adolescent infatuation with some untouch-
These stars included Campbell's soup Warhol had a crush not merely on famous people, but also on the supermarket's plenitude of brand-name goods (see Cat. 185, 186). Desire has materialized into commodities. In imagination WTiitman embraced the American people and blended with them. Pollock's gestures gave him an imaginar}^ oneness ably glamorous presence (see Cat. 183, 184).
cans and Brillo soap pads, for
Fig.
4
Tom
Wesselmann, Great Ajuericau Xiide
No. )7, 1964. Whitney
New York
Museum
of .-Vmerican
.\rt,
The
Fig. 5
Eric Fischl,
Collection,
Bad Boy,
Erotic Dimension in American Art
169
1981. Saatchi
London
with unbounded American space. Warhol, too, identified himself with America, ting
all
his attention
be absorbed by the endless
a place in the array of celebrities
field
of American
stars.
let-
As he found
he so promiscuously adored, Warhol's art defined
sexuality as narcissism unalloyed.
In obscure corners of Warhol's oeuvre are a few explicitly sexual images.
homosexual, though several show
a
naked
man and woman
in a casual
Most
embrace.
are
None
offers the affront of Benglis's portrait with dildo or of Morris's rough-trade beefcake.
That
sort of aggression
was rare
in
American
art until the 1980s,
when
a
period of
uninhibited sexual illustration began. In Eric Fischl's pictures (see Fig. 5) the un-
expected nakedness of certain figures introduces sexual tensions into otherwise unexceptionable scenes of suburban family
life.
The
effect
is
always mysterious. Fischl
is
given to theatrical lighting effects and subtly skewed perspectives, and he likes to load his pictorial narratives
with insoluble clues.
nostalgia for the onset of adolescent sexuality.
Fig. 6
Max
Jeff Koons, Position Three, i^gi. Galerie
Hetzler,
Cologne
Still,
he conveys
a
sharp and uneasy
lyo
Carta- Ratd'tff
Fig. 7
Cindy Sherman,
Pictures,
Nothing mars the happiness of Keith Haring's universe
(see Cat. 235, 236).
New
Untitled, 1992.
Metro
York
As
some method other patterns, Haring often told
spaceships hover and dogs bark, androg^Tious babies multiply by
than the usual one. Arranging his creatures in narrative sexual stories.
Sometimes
sible to distinguish
a drawing's
copulating figures proliferate until
one body from another. Line
itself
it is
becomes orgasmic,
impos-
as in the
dripped, poured and splashed canvases of Pollock. In Haring's hands, Pollock's subtly ordered intimations of the infinite a
down-town Manhattan All
is
become images of exuberant
disorder, as
carefully controlled in the sugar}'
manoeuvers with Cicciolina
(see Fig. 6).
world where Jeff Koons executes sexual
His
fanatically detailed pictures
and statues
of their couplings illustrate an idea of Utopia. If we attend carefully, he promises, will
be the better for
said that 'Jeff
it.
Koons
Talking of a film he planned to make with CiccioHna, the there for people to
is
on
dance-floor.
become who they
are.
And
after
we
artist
someone
am this, am becoming this. "...The public will only have an impression of w^hat they can become.'" The promise is that sex, or the spectacle of Koons having it, is good for you. Remarkably, he gives signs of being con\inced by his own moralizing. Cindy Sher-
\iews the film, they are
.
.
.
going to have the impression that
"I
can be
this, I
I
man's kind
is
more con\incing, or at least more unsettling. a decade Sherman has taken photographs of
For more than
roles (see Cat. 242-5).
At
first,
herself in assumed
these were familiar stereotypes from B-mo\ies - the
quietly sex\' librarian, the would-be career
woman
ft-eshly arrived in
Manhattan.
became more bizarre. She impersonated a coven of grotesque hags in one series of photos. Another showed her as a corpse half silted over by waves. Sherman has vanished ft-om her most recent works, as masks, false breasts and bellies, and bits of mannequins arrange themselves in allegorical figures of sexual horror. All are contorted, some are mutilated. The most dreadful one (Fig. 7) leers at us as she Slowly, her self-images
gives birth to
something unidentifiable. These figures preach caution.
conjured up, -\IDS
is
Reaching back to her casts
shadows over the
earlier
ver\'
art,
notion of gender. Sherman's illustrations of sexual trauma
most abidingly powerful images are not
illustrative.
am-way, the images that remain strong over the seasons are enacted
by exemplary gestures. And the strongest of these gestures are charged, with
dangers
work, the calm and ghastly light of her new pictures
are persuasive at present. Yet the
In American
Of the
only the most obvious.
a sensuality that
sweeps aside
all
limiting notions of gender.
like Pollock's, 9.
Quoted
in .\ndre\v
Art, vol. 23, no. 153,
Renton,
'Jeff
Summer
Koons'. Flash
1990, p. 112.
lyi
Karal Ann Marling
The Media
in America:
But
is it
Art?
A selection of incidents
from the media during 1992: George HoUiday, the bystander who videotaped the beating of Rodney King by Los Angeles police officers on 3 March 1991, sues film-maker Spike Lee for in•
fringement of cop\Tight, charging that the footage Lee has incorporated into his
upcoming movie, Malcolm X, was illegally obtained. The discrepancy between Holliday's tape of King being brutalized by the cops (Fig. i) and the verdict of a jury that concluded they didn't do
it
expected to figure in their •
Bill
sparked off the L. A.
Denny hauled from
driver Reggie
McKibben,
riots.
A second video, showing lorry
the cab of his vehicle and beaten by rioters,
is
trial.
a writer for the
New
Yorker,
ington suburb for tw-enty-four hours straight
off.
watches cable television in
He sees some
a
Wash-
amazing stuff- yowl-
ing televangelists, obscure sporting events, infomercials for products almost too bizarre for the
day alone on
a
normal
retail trade
mountain.
The
pungency of life into one tual
and endless re-runs of sitcoms. Then he spends
conclusion:
TV^ sucks. is
McKibben wants no
package of
the global village Marshall
part of it.
a
out the specificity and
vast, undifferentiated, placeless, timeless
snack food for nineteen-year-olds. If this
prophesied in the 1960s,
It flattens
spiri-
McLuhan
He'd rather be Thoreau
jun.,
pla\ang at hermithood somewhere in the /Vdirondacks." •
On the
of his
tenth anniversary of its
sci-fi thriller
looks a
littie
too
first release,
Ridley Scott presents a
new version
Blade Runner --sl so-called 'director's cut'. Perhaps the original film
much
like
Rodney King's Los Angeles
he has re-edited the sMovy to highlight
a
for comfort.
But Scott claims
romantic sub-plot. In one of the most famous
passages in American literature, the narrator of F. Scott Fitzgerald's The Great Gatsby
gently past?' all
tells
Gatsby
along. •
the hero that he can't alter the past to suit his fancies. 'Can't repeat the
The
cries.
'WTiy of course you
In an impassioned
Still from George Holliday's video of Rodney King being attacked by Los Angeles I
police officers,
Bill
3
McKibbon, The Age
bifomiatwu, F.
Alarch 1991
o^llssiiig
New
York, 1992, pp. 52-3. Scott Fitzgerald, The Great Gatsby, in
Mizener, ed.. The Fitzgerald Reader, York, 196^, pp. 185-6.
.•\rthur
New
Well, Jay Gatsby was apparendy right
Op-Ed piece for the Los Angeles Times Emmy-winning proLaw and Hill Street Blues) complains about too much
ducer Steven Bochco (oi L.A.
Fig.
can.''
new, hearts-and-flowers Blade Runner proves his point.
.
K/inil
Aim
Mai-ling
market research and too many commercials on network T\\ vision as an art form', he concludes, 'and challenge those
'I'd
acknowledge
working
in the
tele-
medium
to
redefine their standards of excellence accordingly.''
The
•
largest indoor
shopping mall
in the
world opens in suburban Alinneapo-
lis/St. Paul, a few miles from the first indoor mall ever built (in 1954-56). This new mega-mall, the .Mall of-\merica, consists of more than three hundred stores centred
on an amusement park
replicating the adventures of Charles Schulz's cartoon beagle,
'Snoopy', from the Peanuts comic ture Jack
strip.
Two years eadier, the French Alinister of Cul-
Lang had named Schulz 'Commandeur
of his contribution to world
Alusee des
art.
Snoopy appeared
Decoratifs in Paris,
-\rts
des Arts et Lettres' in recognition
For the opening of the Peanuts retrospective in a suit designed
at the
by couturier
Christian Lacroix.
Oh - and
one more thing.
Home Fires,
In
•
book
a
that follows a middle-class familv
\\ ar to 1990 using techniques of documentary' film or his subjects in 1948 gathered
ment
The neighbours
plan.
around
a
from the Second World
home \-ideo, Donald Katz finds
ten-inch T\" set bought on the weekly pay-
dozen strong. T\'
are there, too, three
sets are
still
Owners are trend-setters, electronic pioneers. A professor looking into phenomenon finds that watching TV^ stifles conversation, except during the commercials, when even-body talks as quickly as possible in 'a new kind of rapid dis-
novelty items. the
course'. In 1948 people
who
have
sets
spend an average of three-and-a-half hours
a
day in front of them."
So what,
if
amthing, do these assorted incidents have in common? Urban
T\
Books based on toon
critters in the
bone contempt still
.
Film auteurs adding moustaches to their own Mona
riots.
Lisas.
Car-
roimd. California culture ascendant or in flames. Bred-in-the-
for the
media coexisting with the
wistful notion that tele\-ision
aspire to the condition of fine art? Factoids. Fragments. Marshall
might
McLuhan.
the
Canadian professor of hterature who became .America's best-known media theorist of the television age, treated argumentation
as a
discontinuous process. In the old-
moved from left
fashioned print media, for which he had increasingly little use, things
to right in a logical lock-step. In the electronic age of pixels, ever\-thing
on the screen,
all
over, simultaneously.
So
McLuhan tried to write in
a
was up there
mosaic format,
juxtaposing suggestive obsenations without 'proWng' that one fact influenced an-
other in any particular way. Hey, 'the jnediu?n
Form and
is
the message'.'
content were both at issue in his work. His
they were legion, hated what
McLuhan
many professional
critics,
and
analysed: ads, comics and Charles \"an
Doren, the promising academic turned notorious prime-time game-show cheat. The anti-McLuhanites also despised the way he did
MT\"
it,
in
aphorisms and
ellipses that look.
That wasn't exactly McLuhan's point, but it was close enough. Tele\dsion was a 'cool' medium, invoKing the \-iewer in a direct, sensory way, as s/he reconstructed images from scattered motes of light on the picture tube. Realit}-. in other words, was the responsibilit\- of the guy in the La-Z-Boy chair with the cold beer. Although McLuhan harboured the odd in retrospect, like an afternoon of
translated into
t}-pe.'
the tube, there was nothing passive about the collective, neo-tribal ritual being en-
acted around his electronic hearth.
thought
actively
The mosaic made
at the
.
.
whether 'adult'
in his
the epitome of
.
all
famous essay
that
is
in praise
spurious in the
It
was purest
kitsch,
life
of our times.'"
And
kitsch
-
form of dancing Alka-Seltzer bottles, moronic radio soap operas or \\ esterns on tele\nsion - was a conspirac\- on the part of capitalist overlords
The
spurious media culture was nothing
O te?npora!
more than
a
its
commodit}', an
Ad men ruled the media and the media ruled the supine mores! .Mxm Toffler counted the number of dramatized classics
instrument of oppression.' masses.
Kitsch' (1939), in Francis Frascina, ed., Pollock Critical Debate, X'ew York,
and After: The 8.
wrote
in the
whims."
7.
of the avant-garde, 'ersatz cul-
variously to subdue, to arouse or to narcotize an audience of nitwits, according to e\il
6.
MarshaH McLuhan, Understanding Media: The Kxtensions of Man, Xe\\" York. 1964, pp. 7-8. See, for example, Ra\Tnond Rosenthal, ed., McLuhan: Pro and Con. Xew York, 1968. Clement Greenberg, 'Avant-Garde and
1985, p. 25.
subject-matter of popular art and despaired.
Clement Greenberg ture
pp. 36-7. 5.
sense because the audience
This attitude contrasts markedly with the stance of many of his peers, who looked hard
4.
did.
it
T\'I' Minneapolis
"Here's what's
Star Tribune, 8 September 1992, 7E. Donald Katz. Home Fires, Xew York, 1992,
was not the priman* sense engaged when famihes gathered before
belief that \-ision
wrong with
3
9.
Herbert J. Gans explains and disputes this reasoning in Popular Culture and High Culture: An Analysis and Evaluation of Taste, Xew York, 1974, p. \-iii. See. for example. .Max
Horkheimer and Theodor W. Adomo, 'The Culture Industn': Enlightenment
as .Mass
Deception', in The
Dialectic of Enlightenment, trans.
John
Cumming. Xew York, 1972, for the bestknown formulation of a thesis latent in many .\merican texts of the 1950s, including John
Kenneth Galbraith's The Affluent Society (1958) and \'ance Packard's The Hidden Peiyuadas
{ii)j~).
The Media and
and symphonies broadcast by the networks that mindless trash and the
TV
in a given year in a
Art
173
vahant effort to prove
were not always synon\TTious.' But Newton
set
Alinow, Chairman of the Federal Communications Commission, in a famous 196 speech, called the broadcast industry'
The
distrust of
media-made
'art'
vast wasteland' of tasteless, debasing dreck."
'a
or popular culture in the 1950s and early 1960s
had something to do with the exalted
Beginning with Abstract
status of high art.
Expressionism, American art was one of the major ideological weapons of the Cold
War
era. Its gestural
aspirations:
was
imagery stood for freedom and
scale for
its
American
cultural
Jackson Pollock and his contemporaries proved that the United States
a leader in art as well as in the
side the So\net
Union and
technology of consumer merchandise. And, along-
the Sputnik (1957), America could further claim a certain
moral superiority from the Pop
artist's
critique of tail fins, ads, comics
food. Despite his preaching in favour of TV,
McLuhan
and processed
himself larded his prose with
reverential twaddle about artists of the avant-garde persuasion shooting non-elec-
mere mortals glued to their sets could scarcely imagine. Andy Warhol and the others were marketed like refrigerators or rock stars, art seemed insulated from the grubby grasp of capitalism by its own pictorial inscrutability." \^Tiat did these drips mean} These soup cans? Only the critics knew for sure. There were movie critics, too, of course. Even the weekly TV Guide offered occasional commentary' on the significance oi Bonanza or I Love Lucy along with the channel listings." In general, however, the media confirmed the American tradition of tronic 'probes' into a future
Finally, despite the fact that Pollock,
individuahsm, whereas
democratic claims of
art,
mediated and interpreted by
readily apparent in politics than in aesthetics.
makes every viewer once broadcast
'experts',
meritocrac}' and a self-selected
class,
a judge,
an expert,
in living colour
advanced the anti-
The
elite.
effect
The Rodney King \ndeo,
just as the daily spectacle
during the dinner hour,
let
is
more
for instance,
of the Vietnam War,
viewers judge
Lyndon
Johnson, William Westmoreland and the other military experts. Abraham Zapruder's
home movie
of the Kennedy assassination continues to challenge
what happened
in Dallas in
November
1963.
The media
official
accounts of
level the playing field.
By
permitting free access to images - and to pictures that have evaded cultural censorship
- they have always served the
interests of the immigrant, the illiterate, the per-
son without high standing or influence, the average American.
Los Angeles
forces as well, perhaps chaos in
basic to the
American national
is
If
they are anarchistic
the price of accessibility. But they are
character.
In an ingenious essay on advertising Daniel Boorstin traces American anarchy,
along with individualism, hyperbole, optimism and an obsession with novelty, to the
newcomers across the Atlantic in the first place. According to his woodblock prints in exploration chronicles, illustrated handbills for the railroads, dime novels, paperback almanacs and Buffalo Bill's Wild West were crude versions of the modern media, spreading the news of a new land and touting its real and mythical virtues. Such 'advertising', he wTites, 'has become the heart of the ads that brought
'^
analysis, fanciful
10.
Alvin Toffler, The Culture Consumers: Ait and Affluence in America, Baltimore, 1964, pp. 21-32.
folk culture
11.
Quoted
12.
Family Ideal in Postwar A?nerica, Chicago, 1992, p. 48. See Christin J. Alamiya, Pop Art and Consumer
in L\Tin Spigel,
Telrcision
and
Make Room for TV:
the
American Super \larket, Austin, 1992. See Glenn C. \ltschuler and David I. GrossCulture:
13.
vogel, Changing Channels: America in
14.
Guide\ Urbana, 1992. Daniel J. Boorstin, 'Advertising and American Civilization', in Yale Brozen, ed., Adveitising
and 15.
'TV
Society,
New York,
1974, pp.
12, 23.
See Karal .\nn Marling, Ceorge Washington
and A?ne?-ican Culture, iSr6-igH6, Cambridge, .\IA, 1988, pp. 160-2. For the relationship between fine and popular art in the nineteenth century, see Lawrence W. Levine, Highhrou- Loirbrow: The
Slept Here: Colonial Revivals
and even
its
very prototype'. x\nd for most of the nineteenth centur\\ folk
George Washington looked much Rembrandt Peale oil painting as in the bowl of a souvenir spoon fi-om the 1893 World's Columbian Exposition.'' The American .\rt Union flourished at mid-century under a lotten^ system whereby all members got an engraving of the expression and art were not altogether dissimilar:
the same in a
genuine
oil
painting awarded to
a single,
lucky ticket-holder.
The medium,
not the
message, was the watershel between high and low art in an emerging age of mechanical reproduction.
The media were
multiples,
made
possible bv the
new technology'
of the industrial world.
Mass
culture,
media
culture, begins in earnest with the
the other great American
fairs
of the turn of the
Columbian
century'. In
E.xposition and
Chicago,
St.
Louis,
Buffalo and San Francisco huge crowds, undifferentiated by income or learning,
gathered to celebrate progress around giant machines that wove yard upon identical
E?nergence of Cultural Hierarchy in Af/ierica,
yard of carpet, printed newspapers by the bundle and cranked out thousands of
Cambridge,
.souvenir handkerchiefs, each
iVlA, 1988.
one bearing the same likeness of the
F'ather of
His
Karal Ann Marling
174
CountT}-. Often the festi\nties took place in buildings constructed with the latest
interchangeable, factorx'-made parts but artistically disguised as temples of Imperial
Rome.
.Art
conferred dignit\- on the products of the machine. Art looked singular,
stunning, unique - in marked contrast to the
gewgaws any
tourist could take
secure in the knowledge that his pictorial handkerchief was just Hke
home,
the rest.
all
The past vs. the present. Art vs. the media. The first home-grown avant-garde movement in American painting of the twentieth centunhinged on such polarities. The artists of the so-called Ashcan School assimilated Tradition
vs.
innovation.
media iconography into their paintings
(see Fig. 2). Specifically, they represented the
amusements and the \ibrant street hfe of the urban masses - especially of children - or pictorial themes common to both craven journalism and the reformist magazine photography of Lewis Hine.'* The transgressive element in Ashcan art -the group was called 'the black revolutionan' gang' - was not its alia prima technique but its
hard-bitten, press-room topicality'. According to the experts, art in gilded frames
was supposed
to trade in loftier stuff altogether: sentiment, sensibilit}', beaut}',
eternal truths.
Until D.
W. Griffith came
to 'reform' the mo\-ies \\ith doses of Biblical historicism
and morahty, the early motion picture industry also dwelt on popular Ashcan School themes.'"
As long
as the films
mo\ies enjoyed some
OK. So was 'artists'
were
silent
and the aesthetic derived from movement,
intellectual standing as a crude folk art. Charlie
the antic, street- wise Alickey
Mouse
of the 1920s. But
had the temerit}' to suggest that the movies might actually be
art in their
own right,
reasserted (see Fig.
the distinction between
3).
In 1912
W insor AlcCay,
modern animation, lamented the chance to draw for the mo\ies. 'The coming father of
utation not by pictures in
mere media and
still life,
brilliant
2
John Sloan,
Picture Shop
Windoa; 1907. Gift
when cinema new kind of
a
real culture
was
swiftly
newspaper cartoonist and
fact that xXIichelangelo artist',
Chaplin was
Fig.
The Newark Museum, Newark, New Jersey; of Mrs FeUx Fuld, 1925
he predicted,
'will
never got the
make
but by drawings that are animated.''" But
his rep-
when he
tackled a serious, contemporary subject with tragic overtones in The Sinking of the Lusitania (1918), the artistic merits of McCay's effort were admired chiefly by other
animators.
WTien
\\ alt
Disney wedded
1940 Fantasia, the film was a Yet, able.
critical disaster
and
throughout the 1930s, detente between
Government
places
classical
relief
where the only
art
music to the cartoon format in a financial flop.
art
and the media had seemed
programmes were bringing murals was
in the
his
form of greeting
to
pubHc
ine\it-
btiildings in
cards, calendars, picture
maga-
Fig. 3 Reginald Alarsh, 20-Cent \Ioiie, 1936. WTiitnev Museum of American Art, New York
16.
On
die entertainment media of the streets,
see
Rob
ville
Sn\der, The Ihice of the and Popular Culture in \'eii'
Cipf: laiitie-
York,
New
York, 1989. 17.
The
See Lan- Ma\-, Sarening Out the Past: and the Motion Picture
Biith of Mass Culture hidustiy, 18.
Quoted
New York, in
1980, esp. chs.
John Canemaker,
His Life and Work,
New York,
2
lllnsor
and 4. McCay:
1987, p. 134.
I
The Media and
Art
175
Thomas Hart Benton, //o/AiiooJ, 1937. Fig. 4 Nelson- Atkins Museum of Art, Kansas City; Bequest of the artis
zines and movies with elevated themes."
Under
the auspices of Associated American
Artists, a private
New York firm that sold prints by established figures through a mail-
order catalogue
at
ing Grant
Wood
for the studios.'"
media
department store
Benton was
pubhcist and
as a
prices, a
and Thomas Hart Benton a
number of prominent painters, includwent to Hollywood to work
(see Fig. 4),
Disney in reverse, peddling his painterly sendees to the
a reporter.
Thus,
it is
hardly surprising that Disney should
have hired Benton and the Surrealist Salvador Dali to work on
a sequel to Fantasia,
eventually abandoned in the fire-storm of mocker)' that greeted his presumptuous foray into
art.
After his brush with high
art,
Disney returned to the media with
a
vengeance,
becoming, arguably, the single most influential force in twentieth-century visual culDisneyland (1955) virtual realit\' took on three dimensions and viewers could literally inhabit the film or T\" show. He was the
ture. First,
first
he reconfigured the media:
of the HolH^w'ood moguls to cease
ergistic relationship
betw een one
at
hostilities
with television and develop the
medium and the other. Home viewers
s\ti-
could change
the channel ft-om a Western to a cartoon; tourists at Disneyland could stroll fi"om
Frontierland into the precincts of Fantasyland, presided over by Donald
'Alain Street U.S.A.', Disneyland,
Fig. 5
.\naheim, California, 1955
19.
See, for example, Karal .\nn .Marling, Wall-to-
Wall America:
A
Murals
Great
in the
Social Histoiy of Post-Office Depressitffi,
.Minneapolis,
1982. 20.
See of
F.rika Doss, Beutoiu Pollock, and the Politics Modernism, Chicago, 1991, esp. ch. 3.
Duck and
176
Karal Alui Marling
Mickey Mouse. The circular forms of Mickey's head constituted a \isual esperanto, on a par with the Coca-Cola logo. In the new Disney park in Florida, opened in the 1970s, Mickey, the globe and a geodesic dome were conflated into one universal symbol of benign but omnipresent wholeness.
In the past decade Disney's corporate empire has been lauded for hiring cuttingedge architects - Michael Graves, Robert A. xM. Stern, Frank Gehry-to design its
theme parks and with Disney, exploited
it
architects
who
offices.
In a real sense, however, post-modern architecture began
recognized the imagistic power of the commercial vernacular and
in Disneyland, almost twenty years before
might benefit from
ping mall, where
'real'
a closer
look
at
Robert Venturi suggested that
Las Vegas."
The contemporary
post-modern architecture on the outside cloaks
a
shop-
vernacular
may include cowboy car\^atids and whole amusement parks, can also be traced back to Main Street U.S.A. at the entrance to Disneyland (Fig. 5). In this rich stew of images, which is the medium and which the message? WTiere does the art stop and something else begin? Are malls media? Or solid, by-God things: architecture, interior that
art?
Does
it
Between
matter?
It's
ever\^where,
Americans now watch, on average, the 1950s.
all
the time, this 'whatever-it-is-ness'.
trips to the mall, after (or with) a daily
The
six
hours of
dose of the morning funny pages,
tele\'ision
even- day. But
it's
not
like
choices are staggering. Network. Cable: the all-Disney channel; old
black-and-white movies, colorized by Ted Turner; Technicolor epics re-sized and
home use. The VCR. Video games. Grandpa's home movies translated xMcLuhan would be dazzled by the sheer level of potential involvement. Zapping through the chamiels. Sound off. Sound on. EveryiJiing green, or orange. Do-it-yourself television. Mutable. Personalized. Culture at Home. Art: where the pictures and the hot stories are - Rodney King's story^, according to George HolHday's video. Pictures - mo\des - that are never quite the same twice: you can re-run the past any time, day or night, and make it better, or more colourful, or more artfnl. Take it or leave it. Go live on a mountain top. Or stay tuned for Eyewitness News at re-edited for to tape.
II.
Riots in L. A.
Fig. 6
Edward
Kieiiliulz, Six u'Clock Neiis, 1964.
Collection William X. Copley
21
.
Robert Venturi, Denise Scott Brown and Steven Izenour, Leaniing From Las Vegas, revised edn., Cambridge, \W, 1977.
177
Peter Selz
Americans Abroad
In 1766 John Singleton Copley, the foremost painter of the American colonial period,
wrote to his compatriot Benjamin West in England, lamenting that in the American colonies not a single portrait was 'worthy to be called a Picture'.' Eight years later
Copley went
There he painted
to England.
Arts and spent the next
Pennsylvania for
fort)^
London
and
his masterpiece, Watson
the
who had
years as a 'British' painter. West,
left his
succeeded Sir Joshua Reynolds
in 1763, eventually
Shark
was elected to the Royal Academy of
(1778; National Gallery of Art, Washington),
native
as Pres-
ident of the Royal Academy.
Copley's was not the
Thomas
last
such lament to be raised. Even
a
hundred years
later,
Cole, an artist of great spiritual aspiration, spoke regretfully of an American
public that preferred 'things not thoughts'. American artists had to cope with a con-
The work of the carpenter and the artimore highly valued than the rarefied pursuit of the arts; an egalitarian sensibilit)^ in the new republic found it hard to give special respect to artistic talent; geries of adversity in the nineteenth centur\^
san was
and an ingrained Puritan tradition regarded the sensuous aspect of the
visual arts with
suspicion. In short, a fundamental anti-intellectualism, traceable at least as far back as
Andrew Jackson, marginalized
the 1830s, the era of President
painting and sculpture.
James McNeill England and Erance pro-
In the latter part of the century three of America's foremost
Whistler, Mar\^ Cassatt and John Singer Sargent,
vided a more sympathetic
artistic
and
that
felt
intellectual
artists,
en\ironment,
as well as better
patronage, than their native country.
A generation later,
Lyonel Eeininger
He
lished himself as a painter.
when
opened
it
in
Weimar
was the
in 1919,
left
New York for Germany, where
first artist
and he remained there
In America a supportive intellectual communit)- of exist until the early years
Stieglitz
to
Avenue
Eifth
at 291
was
in
of
this century,
New
when
artists,
until
its
Bauhaus
closure in 1933.
writers and critics did not
Alfred Stieglitz established his gallery
York, a place where
a crucial cultural force in early
he estab-
to join the faculty of the
new
ideas could be exchanged.
twentieth-centun,' America, an antidote
inherent aesthetic provincialism. At the suggestion of his friend and fellow
its
photographer Edward Steichen, he began
photography
in the
1906 to show modern art
in
Photo-Secession Gallery^
at 291.
He
as well as
exhibited Rodin's boldly
unconventional drawings of nudes, never before shown anwhere, and followed them
new drawings by
with
Matisse. Then, in rapid succession, he introduced Toulouse-
Lautrec, Cezanne, Brancusi and Picasso.
In the nineteenth century Americans
gone
Rome, and
to
later to the
who went
chose Paris. There, too, they were swept up
Maurer, who
arrived around 1900, was the
and the Fauves. in his
famous
Max Weber,
class,
which was
in 1910
He
VVcst, 12
Novemhcr
\
WcCouhrcy,. Imenan, Art ,:oo-„j6o: Somrcs iind Dociuiicnts,
Knglcwooci
ClitTs, 1965,
j).
14.
/^
-
American
in contact
had they
to be influenced
by ALitisse
by Patrick Henry Bruce, Arthur B. Carles with Picasso during the incipient years of
doi/aiiier's
work
at Stieglitz's 291 gallen-.
frequented (lertrudc Stein's Saturda\- soirees
most celebrated American expatriate and
had moved to Paris
Ik-njaniin
1766; ciuotccl in lohn
now
an atmosphere of invention. Alfred
in
first
also attended
arranged an exhibition of the
Fleurus. This John Singleton Copley, IcttcAo
for their training
introduced the Spanish painter to his close friend Henri Rousseau and
Many of the Americans I.
Europe
arriving five years later, actually studied under Matisse
and Morgan Russell. Weber was
Cubism.
to
academies in Diisseldorf and Munich. But
\ n
in
de
in the rue
significant avant-gartle writer
1903 and, together with her brother Leo, acquired key paintn-
11
W
,,r-
,
1.
' ,
-^
.
1th extraordman- acumen the Stems '"^^ ^V Cezanne, Matisse, Picasso and others. selected the finest new art. For almost fort)' \'ears (iertrude was an important intcl-
lyS
Pet a- Selz
lectual catalyst. Stieglitz
met her
in
1908 and
year later published her biographical
a
sketches of Alatisse and Picasso in his journal Camera Work. painter Joseph Stella
memorably described
The
Italian-.\merican
encounter with Gertrude Stein:
his
'Somehow in a little side street in Alontparnasse there was a family that had acquired some early work of Alatisse and Picasso. The lady of the house was an immense carcass austerely dressed in black. Enthroned on a sofa in the middle of the room where the pictures were hanging, with the forceful solemnity of a priestess or Sybilla, she
was examining
pitilessly all
Alarsden Hartley, a solo
at
show
Gertrude
newcomers, assuming
a well-trained artist familiar
at 291 in 1912,
Stein's salon,
high and distant pose.''
a
with the
new trends
he met the American expatriates
as well as
Alost important was his encounter with \\assily Kandinsk}"'s book Art.
Ax.
in painting,
Hartley's suggestion, an excerpt
from
it
was published
Hartley's series of abstract mystical paintings, called 'intuitive abstractions'
and
done
in
French painters.
On
the Spiritual in
Camera Work in
in Paris in 1912-13,
'spiritual illuminations', conflated
group.
He went
new
to Berlin
Franz Alarc, and had
Autumn
art
five
was that being created
Henri Bergson's
his Berlin stay.
Germany by
felt
that
the Blaue Reiter
and Alunich, made direct contact with Kandinsky and works included
Salon in Berlin in 1913, the
During
in
1913.
which he
philosophy, Kandinsk}''s art theor}' and American Indian imager\\ Hartley the most significant
had
before sailing for Europe at the age of thirt\--five. In Paris,
first
in
Herwarth
\\'alden's First
German
truly international sun-ey of avant-garde art.
Hartley combined
his
response to the
cit}''s
military'
pageantry^ with mystical si,Tnbolism in strangely emblematic compositions that
reached their cHmax in Poitrait of a Geiinan Officer (Cat. i). Its flags and militar\' insignia referred to an intimate friend who had been killed in action. Hartley achieved a tighdy knit, Cubist-derived structure
German
combined with the
vivid, intuitive
York to Bermuda, to
New New Alexico, back to Paris and Berlin, spent several years in the
south of France tr\ang to enter the
spirit
of Cezanne in Aix, returned to
the beginning of the Nazi period, and then went to
Nova
s^Ti thesis
Germany
at
Scotia before settling in his
native Alaine in 1937, where, during the last six years of his
powerful
colour of
Expressionism. After the war, restless and insecure, he travelled fi"om
life,
he accomplished a
of his previous work.
The son and grandson
of American sculptors, Alexander Calder had studied
engineering before turning to
art.
Realizing that 'Paris seemed to be the place to go',
Fig.
I
Alexander Calder working on
his Circus
(1926-32)
I
\ 2.
Joseph
John p. 29.
I.
Stella, 'Modern .Art' (MS); quoted in H. ^zwx, Joseph Stella, New York, 1971,
Americans Abroad
179
he sailed for France in 1926. For the remainder of his long career, his time and energy
were
di\'ided
between France and America. In Paris he
first
made wire
renditions of
animals and people. These he then animated to create his famous Circus (see Fig.
which attracted the attention of the Parisian
i),
art world.
Calder, inspired by Joan Miro's free organic forms and Piet Mondrian's equilibrator\^ colours,
wanted
to
make three-dimensional
versions of the
latter's
work. His
kinetic sculptures, at first driven mechanicalK^ then floating freely in space,
christened 'mobiles' by Marcel
Duchamp. Although
by experiments in kinetic sculpture by
Duchamp
78).
move
at
random,
Naum Gabo, Alan Ray and fortuitous variations. He invented
himself,
Laszlo Moholy-Nagy, Calder introduced infinite designs that
stirring lightly like leaves in the
Calder changed sculpture from
were
these works had been preceded
a static, solid art to
wind
(see Cat. 72, 77,
one of movement
in time.
During the 1960s and 1970s he continued making mobiles as well as 'stabiles' (so named by Jean Arp), which are monumental in scale and help define the space of their urban en\aronments (see Cat. 75). More than any other American artist of this period, 'Sandy' Calder was accepted in France, as elsewhere, as belonging among the twentieth-century masters.
Isamu Noguchi, Sunken garden for die Beinecke Rare Book and Manuscript Libran-, Yale Universit\-, New Haven, Connecticut, 1960-64 Fig. 2
Isamu Noguchi arrived
in Paris a year after
Calder and assisted him with the
dis-
play of the Circus. Born in Los Angeles to a Japanese poet and an American writer,
Noguchi spent much of his childhood and youth in Japan before returning to study in the US. In New York he was deeply affected by an exhibition of work by Constantin Brancusi, and in Paris the Rumanian master took him into his white studio as his assistant, initiating him into the s\inbolic meaning of pure, abstract form. In 1930 Noguchi returned to the East. He studied with the celebrated Chinese painter Chi Pai-Shih in Beijing, and in Japan he learned to work in clay, largely by studying ancient himiira sculptures. In Japanese sculpture, theatre and architecture he
beyond complexit)' which Brancusi had first instilled in his mind. Returning to New York, he became part of the incipient New York School and also began an extended association with the choreographer Martha Ciraham, found again that
'simplicit}
creating innovative stage designs.
and landscapes voyager,
(see Fig. 2),
These relate to the sculptural t()talit\- of his gardens later became a major aspect of his work. A restless
which
Noguchi worked on
sculpuiral projects in Paris, Cireece, India, Japan, Israel
and the marble mountains of
Italy, carrying out significant civic commissions and producing many designs which, though sometimes unrealized, encapsulate his humanist and visionan- thinking.
i8o
Peter Selz
Mark
Tobey,
who wns born
Midwest, also achieved
in the
Eastern and Western thought.
He
was
a
wanderer
personal synthesis of
a
mystic and, like
as well as a
Nog^chi, acquired familiarity with foreign cultures, which he incorporated into art.
At the age of twenty-eight, living
ent of Baha'i,
uniting
a faith
all
in
New York, Tbbey became
a life-long
religions. In 1923, while residing in Seattle,
his
adher-
•V V
he was
introduced to calligraphic brush painting by the young Chinese painter Teng Kuei.
With
this
mode he
'•'
felt
enabled to use his brush to open up the solid forms of W'est-
'iy
',
/
'
;.
ern art and penetrate the void of space.
Pursuing his search for visit to
China and Japan
became
proficient in
a
realm beyond the rational mind, he undertook
some time in Tobey taught
in 1934, spent
sii??/!
painting.
a
Zen monaster)'
at
throughout the 1930s. There he exchanged ideas with writers and other
marrving Eastern and Western
in
Tobey began
In the early 1940s
white and off-white
lines.
a crucial
Kyoto and
Dartington Hall in Devon
such as Aldous Huxley, Arthur Waley, Pearl Buck and Rupi Shankar,
engaged
in
intellectuals,
who were
/
"!."!
also
ideas.
his all-over abstractions, often using a
mesh of
In these works he rejected formal composition, activating 'r'
the total surface of the painting as an energized continuum (see Fig.
Willard Gallery in
New York in
1944, they heralded the
of Jackson Pollock. Never fully recognized in
Orient
as well as in Paris,
Basle.
ciated
.'
i-
'.-
i,v:
at the
much larger all-over canvases
New York, Tobey was esteemed in the
first
to Ait infonnel and American painter since \Miistler to be honoured
\enice Biennale. Tvvo years
at the
Shown
where he seemed closely related
Tachism. In 1958 he became the with a gold medal
3).
later,
he settled permanently
' ,
/
in
Here again one notices an intricate pattern of acceptance and rejection assowith the phenomenon of 'fleeing America' -whether to Europe or across the
Mark Tobey, White Night, 1942. Seattle Museum; Gift of Mrs Berthe Ponc\- Jacobson
Fig. 3 .Art
Pacific.
For a time French critics did indeed suggest the term 'Ecole du Pacifique' encompass the work of Tobey, Morris Graves and Sam Francis. Born in Oregon 1910 and brought up
man in
in Seattle,
Graves
first
encountered the Orient in 1928,
Merchant iMarine. Returning
to in
as a sea-
immersed himself in the Asian art collection at the Seattle Art Museum and began to study Zen philosophy and aesthetics. He worked closely with Tobey, whose calligraphic 'white the United States
to Seattle, he
writing' Graves adopted for his s\Tnbolic renderings of 'spirit birds' (see Fig. 4),
sacred vessels and pine-trees.
He
shared involvement with
Zen with
his friend, the
composer John Cage, who was greatly influenced by Graves's evocative and mysterious paintings and wrote a series of 'dance chants', or word portraits, of the painter. For most of his life Graves migrated from place to place, always finding spots of seclusion - a rock on Fidalgo Island in Puget Sound or a small isle in Count)' Cork -
whence he occasionally stillness in
Sam
Zen
travelled to
Japan and India.
finds a response in Graves's use of the
The emphasis on
meditative
forms of nature.
Francis went from his native California to Paris, where he became
a \ital link
He was also drawn to the 1957. On first arri\ing in Tok)'0,
between Tachism and Abstract Expressionism.
making the experienced
home. In
first
many
a sense
\isits to
oi deja vu,
Japan in
a 'return to the non-rational',
turn, the Japanese, with their traditional
tive experience,
The Japanese citing a
of
new
\iew of art
responded almost immediately to Francis's
artist, like
and
felt
ven'
as a primarily
work
Orient, -•'5fl^
Francis
much
at
medita-
(see Cat. 121, 122).
the Abstract Expressionist, sees the working process as
eli-
consciousness that becomes the work, and Francis found himself closely
attuned to Japanese aesthetics.
A
sojourn in Europe - almost obligator)' for American
World War - became
less
States with the rise of Nazism.
uge for many eminent emigre Breton,
Marc
Chagall,
artists
before the Second
imperative as their European confreres came to the United
By the mid- 1940s artists,
the United States was providing ref-
including Josef Albers, Herbert Bayer, Andre
Duchamp, Max
Ernst, Lyonel Feininger, Stanley William
Hayter, Richard Lindner, Jacques Lipchitz, Andre Masson, Roberto Matta, Miro,
Moholy-Nagy, Mondrian, Gordon Onslow-Ford, Amedee Ozenfant, Kurt Seligman, Yves Tanguy and Ossip Zadkine (see Fig. 5). Some of these were to take up permanent residence.
Fig.
4
Morris Graves, Blind
Museum
of Modem Art,
Bird, 1940.
Xew York;
The
Purchase
Americans Abroad
i8i
Photograph taken on the occasion of the
Fig. 5
exhibition Gallerj^
'.\rtists in Exile' at
New York,
(front row)
1942
Roberto
.
the Pierre Matisse
From
left to right:
Alatta, Ossip Zadkine,
Yves
Tanguy, Max Ernst, Marc Chagall, Femand Leger; (back row) Andre Breton, Piet Mondrian,
Andre Masson, Amedee Ozenfant, Jacques Lipchitz, Pavel Tcheletchew, Kurt Seligman,
^Eugene Berman
TU^o
German
painters,
Hans Hofrnann and Josef Albers, became
ant art teachers in America.' artists to
There
really
most importseemed no longer any need for American the
go abroad. Nevertheless, they continued to make their pilgrimages to
Europe, chiefly to Paris. Second World War veterans could study there at government expense, and many enrolled at the Academic des Beaux-Arts, the Academic de la Grande Chaumiere and at the ateliers of Fernand Leger and Zadkine. More than three hundred young American painters and sculptors went to Paris during the 1950s. Among them were a good many African Americans who, by moving to France, escaped the discrimination and racism at home while recei\nng more attention and
Fig. 6
Romare Bearden, 777? Prevalence of Ritual: Hirshhom .Museum and Sculpture
Baptmii, 1964.
Garden, Smithsonian Institution, Washington,
DC
3.
Hofinnnn taught then
at his
own
at
Berkeley
school in
in
New
1930 and 1932, York from 1933
Mountain from 1933 to 1949, then was Chairman of the Department of Design at \alc from to 195H. .\lbers first taught at Black (College,
1950 to 1958. 4.
Romare Bearden,
inter\iew with
I
lenr\ Cihent,
June 1968; .\rchi\es of American Art, Smithsonian Institution, Washington, DC.
i82
Peter Selz
None, to be sure, equalled the phenomenal success and the honours accorded Henrys Ossawa Tanner, who had lived as an expatriate in Paris from 1895 until his death in 1937. Between the wars a substantial 'Negro art colony' had been established in Paris, though the artists were less successfril than their celebrated jazz-musician friends. Among the African American artists in Paris better exhibition opportunities.
was the widely respected Beauford Delaney, who exhibited
after the 1950s
tigious Paris galleries.
and Henr\' Miller,
as well as
Romare Bearden, ity
a vital
an older comrade to the American painters.
presence in that blossoming of African American creativ-
between the wars known
charge from the
US Army
many newcomers, found whelming:
'[I]
at pres-
He was a close friend of the writers James Baldwin, Jean Genet
as the
in 1945.
Harlem Renaissance, went to There he was befriended by
Paris after his dis-
Brancusi, but, like
the cultural richness and the diversit}" of Parisian
was so absorbed
other, that I could never get
in seeing
and walking
around to doing any
in Paris
painting.'^
life
over-
from one end to the
Only
after returning to
New York did Bearden create his distinctive, syncopating photo-collages (see Fig.
6),
empathizing with Afro-American culture, and achieve widespread recognition.
The younger generation of African Americans in Paris included Bob Thompson, who did some of his finest post-Abstract Expressionist figurations during his years in the city, before mo\'ing on to Rome and an early death. Barbara Chase-Riboud was given a solo exhibition of her exquisite sculptures, which combine metal and
man shows
in Paris, at
fibre, at
The sculptor Sam Gilliam had one of his first one-
the Alusee d'Art Aloderne in 1974.
Darthea Speyer's
gallerv', in
Howardina Pindell
1970;
w^as
introduced to the art world at the Paris Biennale of 1975; and Ra\Tnond Saunders executed many of his mysterious, paradoxical collages during extended sojourns in the French capital.
When
Ellsw^orth Kelly (Fig. 7)
Max
(1946-48),
mode
Beckmann's
Colmar
licas
a student at the
Boston
Museum
of Beckmann, Ernst Ludwig Kirchner, Alexei Jawlensk}' and, above
On
informed Kelly's early work.' to
was
School
had the greatest impact on him. The expressionist
\-isit
all,
Picasso,
France in 1948 he immediately travelled
arrival in
to see Griinewald's Isenhewi Altarpiece.
Only when he began
creating rep-
of objects in his surroundings was Kelly able to break away from his Beckman-
nesque figurative idiom. By the
1940s he was creating
late
flat
paintings based
on
road-markers, pavements, windows, ground-plans and walls.
He
objects - or, as he called them, 'already mades' - in a
akin to photography;
manner
the geometric shapes were located and arranged in the
artist's
transformed real
eye.
Kelly was in contact with the two groups of Geometric Abstractionists in Paris, Abstraction-Creation and Circle
et
Caire, and
became well acquainted with Alichel Seu-
phor, the leading spokesman of these artists and a follower of Mondrian. ally
wrote to Kelly, voicing his opinion
you're going to be the
Magnelli, but
more
best'.^'
that,
De
Stijl
'amongst Mondrian's serious successors,
Fig. 7
Ellsworth Kelly in the Hotel de
Bourgogne,
Paris,
1949
meeting with Arp in 1950. Kelly was more
Laws of Chance than towards
and neo-Constructi\ist
art.
In
fact,
did during his Paris years, Colours for a Large Wall (Fig. its
eventu-
Kelly encountered Georges Vantongerloo and Alberto
significant w^as his
inclined towards Arp's investigations of the
discourse of
He
the rational
while the foremost work he
8),
had
a systemic appearance,
organization and choice of colours were entirely arbitran^ This large painting
(eight-feet square)
w as
in great contrast to the salon-size paintings
Geometric and Tachist painters scale
alike.
At
this time,
done in Paris by
Kelly was unaware of the large
on which such Americans as Barnett Newman, Mark Rothko and Clyfford Still in New^ York, where he went in 1954 after ha\ing seen the cata-
had been working logue of an Italy,
Ad Reinhardt
exhibition.
which traditionally attracted American
the post-w^ar period. William entire creative
with
Rome
as
artists,
continued to draw painters in
in \ enice in
1948 and spent almost his
life on Italian soil. In 1952 Robert Rauschenberg and Cy Twombly, their base, travelled throughout Italy and to North Africa. In Rome
Rauschenberg continued to Alberto Burri's studio, collages,
Congdon arrived
his
work
in
photography and collage
where he saw the
may have confirmed him
latter's
(see Fig. 9).
His
visit
eloquent, stained, rough burlap
in his exploration of hea\y, encrusted
and ravaged
Fig. 8
1951.
Ellsworth Kelly, Colours for a Large Wall, of Modem .-Vrt, Xew York;
The Museum
Gift of the artist
Americans Abroad
Robert Rauschenberg, Double-exposure photograph of himself and Cy Twombly with the Horses of San Marco, Venice, 1952 Fig. 9
surfaces. Burri arranged for Rauschenberg's exhibition at the Galleria dell'Obehsco in 1953 (see Fig. 10),
given a solo Robert Rauschenberg working on his Peisoiial Fetishes, Rome, c. 1953. Photograph probably taken by Cy Twombly Fig. ID
183
Having
show
where Burri himself had shown
at the Stable Galler\^ in
lived in Spain,
North
a
year earHer; Burri, in turn, was
New York in
1954.
Africa and Italy, Tvvombly (Fig. 11) settled in
Rome
permanently in 1957. His paintings (see Cat. 142-5), with their scribbles and clusters, their cursive skeins, smudges and scratches, may not be immediately accessible in their evocation of ancient myths, their allusions to specific loci, their references to Italian
Renaissance painters, but these concerns are fundamental."
The
tides of the
paintings evoke ancient deities and allude both to Virgil and Hesiod and to Shelley
and Keats,
who had
also
been steeped
Roland Barthes remarked, function in order to
Fig. II
Cy Tvvombly
in
Ellsworth Kelly, telephone conversation with the author, 20 May 1992.
6.
Michel Seuphor, letter to Ellsworth Kelly, 21 October 1953; quoted in Ellrdonh Kelly: The Years in France, ig^8-i(^^^, Washington and Munich, 1992, p. 33, n. 16. Katharina Schmidt, 'The Way to Arcadia: Thcjughts on
Twombly s
in
Mediterranean culture. These
maze
initiated into the work.**
in
which we have
A carefiil
to retrace
tides, as
our steps
reading of Twombly's images
Pompeii, 1957
5.
7.
become
like a
Myths and Images
Paintings', in
Cy
in Ca"
I louston, recognizes that 'the entire field of Mediterranean culture - its myths, its history,
1992, p.
Tivoinhly,
12,
its art, its
acquired
poets, painters, a
and sculptors -
constantly growing, changing and
deepening, yet abiding significance I'lwombly sj life and work'. H.
Roland Bardies, 'The Twombly,
New York,
Wisdom
1979,
of
p. 15.
in
.\rt', in C)-
Fig. 12
R. B. Kitaj,
The Ohio Gang, 1964. The .Museum of .Modern .\rt. New York; Phillip Johnson Fund
Peter Selz
184
permits the viewer to penetrate an apparent chaos to arrive at their inner silence and the opening of a
window on Twombly,
R. B. Kitaj, Hke
His
multiple allusions,
with references to
Born
man
art, literature and histor\\ on \irtuoso drawing, is filled with discontinuous allegories, questions and unexpected relationships, Walter Benjamin, T.S.Eliot, Franz Kafka, Erwin Panofsk}" and
collage-like pictorial
Ezra Pound,
to the classical past.
highly cognizant of
(see Fig. 12), based
mass culture.
as well as to
in Cleveland,
is a
world
Kitaj, too, has led the life
Ohio, he was adopted by
a X'iennese Jew^,
of an expatriate.
brought up in upstate
New York, joined the Merchant Marine, sen-ed in the US Army, studied at Cooper Union in Xew York, the -\kademie in \lenna, the Ruskin School of Art in Oxford and the Royal College of
.Art in
London.
He
emigre in London and considers himself a
decided finally to remain
member of the
he invented. At the same time, he sees himself
as the
as a
permanent
'School of London', a term
perpetual outsider, the
Jew
in
the Diaspora," the artist in exile.
German and find
a
culture, at Stunde Null (zero hour) after the war, required time to recover
new
voice.
The
German government resurrected the D-A\D (DeiitGerman Academic Exchange Service) to bring art-
\\ est
scher Akade7}nscher Aiistaiischdienst; ists
from abroad
centre of the
Lawrence
arts.
to the insular
Ferlinghetti,
Feldman and
cit\'
Among American
a great
of Berlin, to transform
Dick Higgins and
many \-isual
it
into a cosmopolitan
grant recipients were the poets Gregor\' Corso,
Emmet
\Mlliams, the composer
Li Berlin Allan Kaprow, as part of a Flux-us
acti\'it\',
erected Siveet IVall in 1970 with
the help of the American 'concrete poet' Dick Higgins and the
K. H.Hodicke. dox.
The
wall enclosed nothing and separated
During the 1960s and 1970s many American
worked
in
Germany (see
Morton
artists.
no one,
German
artists associated
Fig. 13), which, like the rest of
painter
a S}Tnbol of para-
with Fluxus
Western Europe, supported
more than the L'S. Other D.AAD grant recipients were the h\-perrealist sculptor Duane Hanson; Charles Simonds, the creator of miniature archaizing such
acti\'ities far
ensembles; and Colette,
who
transformed her innovative and intimate li\ing en-
\-ironments into sets and costumes for the Deutsche Oper, Berlin. George Rickey
Fig. 13
1962.
Phil
From
Comer,
Piario Activities,
left to right:
Emmett
Wiesbaden,
Williams,
George Maciunas, Dick Higgins, Benjamin Patterson. Photo © H. Rekort
(unidentified),
In 1989 Kitaj published the
first
Dinspora
Manifesto in London, in the prologue to which he states: 'I ofter this manifesto to Jews and
non-Jews
alike in the (fairly) sure
knowledge
that there be a Diasporic painting.'
.\mericans Abroad
accepted a
DAAD
stipend in 1968. His
moving
sculptural forms
made of
typologies - respond to the motions of nature and are
gineered with mathematical precision. Rickey faber M'hose
work embodies random
and collector of Constructivist
art.
is
both
artist
order. Significantly, he
In 1964
(when
this
- of
is
iSs;
many
a great
bright steel, en-
and engineer, the
ho7f/o
also a student, historian
w riter was Commissioner
for
American Art for 'documenta III') Rickey was invited to install a 35-foot-high sculpture of two tapering stainless steel blades which oscillated in parallel rh\^hms in ft-ont of the Fridericianum in Kassel. This work confirmed his reputation in Germany.
Over ing for
I
a
its
period of some twent\' years, Rickey spent half of every year in Berlin, enjoy'intelligence, attraction
permanent
placed in
installations
fi-ont
ments perfecdy grant.
and energy'.
Among
his
many German commissions
the precisely equiposed Four Squares in a Square (1969),
of Mies van der Robe's Nationalgalerie in Berlin, which in
its classical,
Edward Kienholz has
DAAD
is
it
comple-
balanced symmetry.
also spent at least half of every year in Berlin since his 1973
His tableaux vivants are biting critiques of contemporary
raise disturbing existential questions.
society,
Kienholz was one of the few American
and
artists
whose work commented on the disgrace of the Vietnam W^ar; his narratives of reproach were never popular in iVew York. In Berlin he produced his Volksewpfangers series (see Fig. 14), the cheap old radio receivers of the Nazi period used to listen to Fig. 14
Edward Kienholz, The
C/i^c
(Volksempfangers series), 1975. Private collection
broadcasts of Fascist propaganda.
Now,
instead of emitting the voices of Hitler or
Goebbels, they resound with Wagner's Ring des Nibelungen. interventions by a foreigner in
the
German home,
German
history.
histor\',
Volks empflingers
were
original context in
they were exhibited in Berlin's Nationalgalerie in 1977, producing
both controversy and acclaim. By using history's
on
The
Taken out of their
relics as his objects,
Kienholz reflects
but he also comments on the media in general and their control of our
lives.
Kienholz, coming from a small provincial town in the American penter, a
bricoleiir,
largely self-taught as an artist, a person
recognition in his
embody much of
own
country^
Northw est -
- found acclaim only abroad. His
the enduring impetus that has directed
life
and work
many American
search in European and Asian culture for aesthetic resonances as well as for sense of artistic tradition and
its
ramifications.
a car-
who has never achieved full artists to a
deeper
i87
Thomas
Kellein
the Sheer Size:
It's
European Responses
It
to
American Art
was American products - 'movies, chewing gum, check jackets, Coca-Cola' -
Second World War, came
after the
Central Europe. In the early 1920s States
to
form
fine arts,
art in
and films fi-om the United
Europe and enriched
by contrast, had remarkably
Marcel Duchamp, the French-American
that,
kind of cultural substitute in parts of
jazz, literary fiction
had exerted an influence on modern
and Berlin. American
a
artist
little
who went
to
in Paris
life
effect until 1958.
New York during the
World War, established himself thereafter as an impresario for the development of an infrastructure among private collectors, gallery owners, artists and museums. After forming the Societe Anonym e with Man Ray and Katherine Dreier in 1920 and promoting the importation of works of art from such sources as Herwarth Walden's Der Sturm gallery, the Bauhaus in Weimar and the studio of Kurt Schwitters, he acted in New York as a mentor to young artists, whom he encouraged to First
1
See Lucius Grisebach, 'Stationen amerikanischer Kunst in Europa nach 1945', in Dieter
Honisch and Jens Christian Jensen,
Ame?ikanische Kunst von 1945 bis heute: Ktinst der USA in ewopHischai Sammhingeji, 2
Cologne, 1976, p. 9. See the artists' contributions in Anne d'Hamoncourt and K}Tiaston McShine, eds., Marcel Diichamp, exhibition catalogue, New York, Museum of Modem Art, and Philadelphia
Museum
See Craig Adcock, 'Marcel Mittier zwischen Europa
Duchamp
als
und Amerika',
in
Europa/A?nerika: Die Geschichte einer kiinstlei-ischen
Faszination
catalogue, Cologne,
seit
Museum Ludwig,
1986,
however, of the 1947 exhibition 'Large Scale Paintings' at The Museum of Modern Art, which, in addition to Guernica,
Modem
undertaken. Accounts of the so-called
New
York School generally derive the 'big canvas' from a stylistic logic inherent in modem art
Monet and Mondrian
or
condemn
it
Ad Reinhardt absolutized tendency with his 'art-as-art' dogma: 'The one thing to say about art is that it is one thing'; Barbara Rose, ed., Art-as-Art: The Wittingly or not, this
Ad Reinhardt, New York,
1975, p. 53. In the exhibition field, the
tendency was expressed, above kunst', a
same
by 'Westshow subtitled 'Contemporary Art all,
since 1939'; Laszlo Cilozer, ed., Westkunst: Zeitgenossische
Kunst
seit i()^aris
-V. •^-'
-^i.
13
Mas
Ray, Marcel Diichamp iiARLKs
Demuth,
/ Saii' the
Ihc Metropolitan
Figure 5
cm (35'/: x 30 Museum of Art, W\i
Oil on cardboard, 90 x 76
///
(iohl,
1928
in.)
York;
:1ic Alfrcil Sticglit/ C'ollcction,
1949
46
Charles Demuth,
Love, Love, Love:
Oil on panel, 51 x 53
cm
(20 x 20V4
Homage
in.)
Thyssen-Bornemisza Collection, Madrid
to
Geitrnde Stein, 1928
47
Charles Df.muth, Oil on composition C^ollcction ot
Buildings, Lancaster,
l)oarci,
61 x 51
cm
1930
(24 x 20
Whitney Museum of Auicrican
in.)
Art,
New
York;
(lift ot
an anon\ nious ilonor
Hb^
48
Stuart Davis, Oil,
Cigarette Papers, 1921 bronze paint and graphite pencil on canvas,
48.5 X 35.5
The
cm
(19 X 14 in.)
Alenil Collection,
Houston
49
Stuart Davis,
Odol, 1924
Oil on canvas-hoard, 61 x 45.5
Andrew
I
.
Crispo Collection,
cm
New
(24 x 18
^brk
in.)
50
Stuart Davis, Lucky
Strike,
Oil on paper-board, 45.5 x 61
1924
cm
(18 x 24 in.)
Hirshhom Museum and Sculpture Garden, Smithsonian Washington, DC;
Museum
Purchase, 1974
Institution,
51
Cuarlv.»Sheeler, Upper Ded\ 1929 Oil on canvas, 74 x 56.5
cm
(zy x 22 'A
in.)
Fogg Art Museum, I larvard University Art Museums, Louise E. Bettens Fund
Clamhritlge,
MA;
52
Charles
SHEELt.R, Skysa-ijpers (Offices), 1922
Oil on canvas, 51 x 33
The
cm
Phillips Collection,
(20 x
13 in.)
Washington,
DC
53
Charles Sheeler,
Vini'
Oil on canvas, 121 x 92
Museum
cm
ofNrd' Yofk, 1931 (47 'A x 36 'A in.)
of Fine Arts, Boston;
The Hayden
Collection, 35.69
54
Charles Sheeler,
Classic Landscape, 1931
Oil on canvas, 63.5 x 81.5
Collection of the
cm
Mr and Mrs
(25 x 32
in.)
Barney A. Kbsworrh Foundation, St Louis
55
Joseph Stella,
Factories at
Oil on canvas, 73.5 x 92
Collection of The
cm
Night - Nrcv Jersey, 1929
(29 x 3674 in.)
Newark Museum; Purchase
1936,
Thomas
L.
Raj-mond Bequest Fund
56
JosKiMi SiELLA, A?/icnaiii Liiiidsatpc, 1929 Oil on ainvas. 200. > x 100 cm (yy x ^y'A in.) (iollccrion
Wnlkc/ Art Center, Minneapolis;
(lift
of the
I
.H.
Walker Foundation, 1957
J
57
Edward Hopper,
Drugstore, igz cm (29 x 40
Oil on canvas, 73.5 x 101.5
Museum
of Fine Arts, Boston;
in.)
The Bequest
of John T. Spaulding, 48.564
58
KmvARD
noi>PFR, 4,'/^ow^/, 1927
Oil on canvas, 71.5 x yi.5
Des Moines Art
(Center
cm
(28 x 36
Permanent
in.)
(Collection, 1958.2;
Purcliased with funds from the iMJimindson
,\rt
I-ouiidation, Inc.
59
Edward Hopper, Frow
Williamsburg Bridge. 1928
cm (29 x 43 in.) The Metropolitan Museum of Art, Xew York; George Oil on canvas, 74 x 109
A.
Heam
Fund, 1937
6o
Edward
I
Ioppfr,
Enom
Oil on canvas, 73.5 x 91.5
Sheldon Memorial Art
K M.
in
cm
New
Yoi-k\
(29 x 36
(laller)-,
1932
in.)
LniversiU' of Nebraska, Lincoln;
Hall Collection, 1936.II.-166
6i
Edward Hopper,
Conference at Night, 1949
Oil on canvas, 70 x 102
cm
(27'/: x
40
in.)
Wichita Art Museum, Wichita, Kansas;
The Roland
P.
Murdock
Collection
62
Edward Hopper,
Pennsylvania Coal Town, 1947
Oil on canvas, 71 x 101.5
The
cm
(28 x
40
in.)
Butler Institute of American Art, \bui;ij town, v)I
I
63
Edward Hopper,
Hotel by a Railroad, 1952
Oil on canvas, 79 x 102
cm
(31 'A x 4o'/4 in.)
Hirshhom Museum and Sculpture Garden, Smithsonian Gift of Joseph H. Hirshhorn Foundation, 1966
Institution,
Washington,
DC;
64
Joseph Cornell, .-^ Drcisi/iiT Roo7?i for Gille, 1939 Mixed media box construction, ^8x22 x 17 cm (15 x 8'/: Richard L. Fcigcn,
New
\'()rk
x 6V-t in.)
Joseph Cornell, Greta Garbo, c. 1939 Mixed media box construction, 33.5 x 24 x Richard L. Fei^en,
66
7.5
cm
(13'/:
Xew York
Joseph Cornell, Victorian Parlour (Paolo and Francesca), 1942 Mixed media box construction, 32 x 24 x 7.5 cm (12'/: X 9'/! x 3 Richard L. Feigen, New York
in.)
Constellation
x 9'/: x 3 in.)
67
JosKPii C^ORNKi.i., S(uip Bubble Set, 1940; replica, 1952
Wooden I'lic
An
box with glass and ohjecls, ^4.^ Institute ot (Ihicatjo; Siirieon
li.
x
48. 5
cm
(r^/:
V\'illianis l-und,
x ly in.)
1953. 199
68
Joseph Cornell, LEgypte de Mile Cleo de Merode Cours Elhnentaire d'Histoire naturelle (The Egypt of Mile. Cleo de Merode, Elementary Course in Natural History), 1940 Mixed media box construction, 27 x 18.5 x 12 cm (loV: x y'A x 4V4 in.) Richard L. Feigen,
New Yorlc
69
JosKPH Cx)rni:ll,
Uiititli'cl
{CiTAnd Hotel des lies d'Or), 1952
media box construction, 27 x 15 x 8 cm (iiilcrie K.iricn (ncxc, (ioloirnc and I'aris iVIixcd
(10'/: x
6 x
^A
in.)
70
Joseph Cornell, Untitled (Hotd de I'EtGile), 1953-54 Mixed media box construction, 51.5 x 36 x 12.5 cm (2o'A x 1474 Galerie Karstcn Grevc, Cologne and Paris
x 5 in.)
.'7i
JosKPH
C>()RNKi.i,, t/w^/V/f^
Mix'cd nicciia
l)()x
(Diirer Boy), 195^
construction, 52.5 x ^4
(2o'/-i X 13'/: X 4'/4 in.)
Private c()llecti(