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<text id=89TT0427>
<title>
Feb. 13, 1989: The Best And Worst Of Warhol
</title>
<history>
TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1989
Feb. 13, 1989 James Baker:The Velvet Hammer
</history>
<article>
<source>Time Magazine</source>
<hdr>
ART, Page 94
The Best And Worst Of Warhol
</hdr><body>
<p>A show traces the banality that inspired and undid him
</p>
<p>By Robert Hughes
</p>
<p> New York City's Museum of Modern Art, which showed no great
enthusiasm for Andy Warhol while he was alive, went after him
con brio as soon as he was dead. The bakemeats were barely cold
upon the funeral table when the word went out that MOMA was
going to give Warhol the palladium of a full-scale
retrospective -- his first in New York since the more premature
effort that went on view at the Whitney Museum of American Art
in 1971. Whether MOMA wanted to get the crowds before a rival
museum did, or simply to get the job over and out of the way,
is uncertain: probably both.
</p>
<p> Of the 273 works in the show, more @than a third are from
Warhol's estate, mostly very early or very late ones, though no
special interest attaches to "Warhol's Warhols" beyond the
circumstance that they were unsold at the time of his death.
Nevertheless, despite this compliance with their sales pitch,
the guardians of Warhol's name and estate (who are busy
marketing his aura like a combination of Jesus Christ's and
Donald Duck's) are reportedly miffed by the form that the show
took at the hands of its curator, Kynaston McShine. The show's
emphasis falls on Warhol up to 1968, the year he was shot by a
mad lumpen-feminist named Valerie Solanis, one of the
hangers-on at his studio, the Factory. The treatment of
post-1970 and especially of 1980s Warhol is, by comparison,
skimpy.
</p>
<p> Is this fair to Warhol? No, if you are among those who think
he was the most important American artist since Jackson Pollock,
a genius whose spirit continues to brood over American culture
and to infuse the best young art of our time. Yes, if you think
that Warhol had about five remarkable years (1962-67) followed
by a long downhill slide into money-raking banality, with his
social portraits and his silk-screen editions of dogs, famous
Jews of the 20th century and Mercedes; or that his actual
influence on younger artists varied from liberating to
moderately disastrous. The show fills in details in one's
knowledge of Warhol's work -- for instance, how his fascination
with the repeated image was there from his earliest days as an
illustrator -- but does not change one's sense of its basic
priorities.
</p>
<p> Much of the work, in fact, now seems an appendage to
Warhol's most authoritative creation: his fame -- the meticulous
construction of a persona vivid in its coy blandness, pervasive
and teasing in its appeal to the media, and deathlessly
inorganic. Warhol looked like the last dandy, right from the
start of his public career. As the late critic Harold Rosenberg
put it, he was "the figure of the artist as nobody, though a
nobody with a resounding signature." This subverted the romantic
stereotype of the artist -- hot, involved, grappling with fate
and transcendence -- that American popular culture, and hence
most American collectors, had boiled down from Van Gogh and
Pollock.
</p>
<p> Instead, in Warhol one had the detached art-supplier with
mass-cultural fixations on things everyone knew: canned soup,
Liz, dollar bills, death. Fame was the real qualifier. One
doubts, somehow, that Warhol plow[ed through Faust before
cranking out his flashy and unfelt variations on Tischbein's
portrait of Goethe. No ideological motives lurk behind the
benign collective visage of his innumerable Mao Zedongs; but a
billion Chinese could no more be wrong about such a celebrity
than 200 million Americans could be about Jackie or Marilyn.
</p>
<p> The sense of deja vu one gets from the show is hardly the
curator's fault. It is built into the career itself. Warhol's
paintings came out of a culture of mass production and
reproduction, and have been run back through it so widely and
often that they contain very few surprises. With a few piercing
exceptions, they seem generic. His Mona Lisas are by now as
famous as Leonardo's, especially for people who don't care much
for old art. (Except that, for a lot of the audience, they are
old art -- mysterious icons of the remote '60s.) On the whole,
the sense of expansion and refreshment one feels in going from a
reproduction of a well-known painting to its original is
lacking, because his paintings are all based on silk-screen
reproduction of photographic images. Whether flat and grainy, as
in the '60s, or worked up with a creamy slather of broad-brush
pigment, as in the '70s and '80s, they are essentially
simulations of the act of painting, types of visual packaging.
</p>
<p> Warhol began and ended as a commercial illustrator; what
lies between is the interesting stuff. He was an adroit
draftsman but not a distinguished one. He soon overcame the
influences of his early advertising days (Jean Cocteau and Ben
Shahn), but the drawing is never more than efficient. Partly
for this reason his freehand "studies" of soup cans or dollar
bills never acquire the pressure of the silk-screened ones,d but
it is hard to see how they could: those coarsely nuanced rows
of ready-mades, in taking Duchamp a small step further, remain
the most eloquent comments on the standardization of mass taste
in American art. On desire, Warhol could be dreadfully
accurate. His idea of silk-screening Marilyn Monroe's
disembodied smile 168 times over derived, no doubt, from Man
Ray's painting of Kiki de Montparnasse's lips floating in the
Paris sky, but the feeling is quite different. It is about the
administration of fantasy by media, not the enjoyment of fantasy
by lovers.
</p>
<p> Warhol's power, uneven as it was, lay in an emotional
narrative that contradicted its cold, fixed, iconic surface. He
unskeined a story in which a horror of the world, verging
sometimes on acute dread, mingled with an artificial calm and a
desire for transcendence. Try as one may, one cannot imagine
Gold Marilyn Monroe, 1962, being painted by anyone but a Roman
Catholic homosexual; it is both completely camp in its
pseudo-Byzantine extravagance and, in its identification of the
star with the Madonna, yearningly devotional. Here, Warhol is
Genet in paint. So too with the "disasters" and the electric
chairs of the early and mid-'60s, which are truly awful in
their curt, grainy enunciation of the facts of casual or
ceremonial death. The sign on the wall of the death chamber --
SILENCE -- provides an essential motif of Warhol's imagination,
and it was hardly an accident of gesture that his best-known
self-portrait has his finger on his lips.
</p>
<p> But the intensity of these early images is closely linked to
the rapture with which Warhol first discovered his own ability
to use detachment -- to make art with what he had, out of his
sense that high art had actually dissolved into mass media. When
this ceased to surprise him, his work came too pat. It coarsened
and turned industrial. Even his later images of foreboding and
death, like the skulls, are trashily melodramatic by comparison
with what had gone before, while his inflated recyclings of
Raphael's Sistine Madonna and Leonardo's Last Supper could
scarcely be more pointless. In the end he was stranded in a
plenitude of subjects with nothing to paint.
</p>
</body></article>
</text>