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TIME: Almanac 1995
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1994-03-25
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<text id=93TT0313>
<title>
Oct. 04, 1993: The View From Piccadilly
</title>
<history>
TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1993
Oct. 04, 1993 On The Trail Of Terror
</history>
<article>
<source>Time Magazine</source>
<hdr>
ART, Page 78
The View From Piccadilly
</hdr>
<body>
<p>In London, a survey of modern American art is spotty and distorted
</p>
<p>By ROBERT HUGHES
</p>
<p> Three weeks ago, an exhibition of the work of the English artists
Gilbert and George opened at the National Art Gallery in Beijing.
Its catalog bore a fulsome essay comparing the two "living sculptures"
to Confucius himself and lamenting the utter decadence of so
much Western art, which "seems to have lost any moral significance
on account of its fruitless search for formal purity. Meaning
and ornament...have been marginalized...The black square
painting is a goal that can appeal only to very few aesthetes.
Not only the black square but equally the crushed automobile,
the Coca-Cola can, and other examples of Western cultural detritus,
all threaten to take over the world."
</p>
<p> Then, a week later, an exhibition called "American Art in the
20th Century" opened at the Royal Academy of Arts in London.
It contained some 230 works by 65 artists, spanning the period
from 1913 to 1993. Among these were, as you might expect, quite
a few of those black squares (Ad Reinhardt, 1913-67), crushed
autos (John Chamberlain, born 1927) and Coca-Cola cans (Guess
Who, 1928-87) spurned by the cultural critic of Beijing. And,
again as you might expect, they are sympathetically, even rhapsodically
treated in the catalog, written in part by the show's curators--Christos Joachimides in Berlin and Norman Rosenthal, the
exhibitions secretary of the Royal Academy. "The time was right,"
carols Rosenthal, reflecting on the postwar dominance of American
art, "the market was right, and it was perhaps inevitable that
after 1945 the American way should become the role model in
art as much as in architecture, popular music, advertising and
film."
</p>
<p> How true. And yet how curious. For Rosenthal wrote and signed
the Beijing catalog essay too. Well, hey, Karl Marx used to
say that capitalist culture harbored contradictions. But it
took this English curator to bring them to the point of total
cognitive dissonance: preening himself as the voice of American
avant-gardes on one side of the world, slagging them off as
"detritus" on the other.
</p>
<p> "American Art in the 20th Century" should have been a drop-dead
show--but it isn't. Perhaps, given the internal struggle between
Rosenthal of Beijing and Rosenthal of Piccadilly, it was doomed
from the start. It sets out to trace the history--or what
its curators consider the high points of the history--of American
painting and sculpture from 1913, the date of the famed Armory
Show, to the flatlands of our fin de siecle in 1993. But it
has no intellectual cogency and, although it assembles a number
of fine and historically emblematic works of art, it doesn't
always locate them properly in the artists' outputs, so that
they tend to look like so many flashes in the pan.
</p>
<p> A case in point is Jackson Pollock's early Mural, 1943, that
magnificent wall of writhing protofigures, its passionate wristy
drawing inspired by 1930s Picasso yet unmistakably leading to
Pollock's mature style. But at the Royal Academy, it doesn't
connect to a major "allover" painting by Pollock, because none
could be borrowed. This problem repeats itself with other artists.
Robert Rauschenberg's Canyon, 1959--that unforgettably poignant
assemblage featuring a real, stuffed, blackened American eagle
spreading its wings but equipped with a pillow in case it fails--needed backing up with more powerful work than this show
could obtain. And the hanging can be awful; if you want to see
two groups of excellent paintings kill each other, take a look
at the room in which Mark Rothko's horizontals and Barnett Newman's
vertical zips are left to slug it out.
</p>
<p> The full history of art doesn't inscribe itself in movements,
in the U.S. or anywhere else. Yet this show is movement-fixated;
it proposes a kind of historical shorthand, a rhetoric of innovations
and "decisive breakthroughs." The curators go on at length about
wanting to show those moments when the ball was first put in
the cannon. Rosenthal even claims that a new American art experienced
"parthenogenesis"--virgin birth, without a father--with
Pollock's 1943 paintings.
</p>
<p> The trouble with this kind of approach is that first isn't always
best. The history of American art abounds in artists who developed
late and did their best work long after the movements they were
first associated with had lost their impetus. Stuart Davis,
for instance, was a far better painter in the 1930s than in
the 1920s. The full unfolding of Robert Motherwell's talent,
particularly in collage, happened after the prime years of Abstract
Expressionism, and the same is true of Lee Krasner. (Not that
it matters to this show, which includes neither of them.)
</p>
<p> Second, there is no shortage of Americans who weren't "movement"
artists and yet turned into remarkable and even great figures
in their own right--and these aren't included either. Isamu
Noguchi doesn't figure in a show that is laden to the gunwales
with 1960s Minimal sculpture; later its curators find space
for Jeff Koons' twerpy silver train and floating basketball,
but none for Richard Diebenkorn's figurative paintings or even
his superbly Apollonian Ocean Parks.
</p>
<p> The sections dealing with Pop art and Minimalism are strong
and, on the whole, well chosen--decadent though they may look
in Beijing. But the historical structure is lame-brained because
it ignores a vein of American art in the early 1960s that, though
out of favor today, has a solid claim to inclusion: abstract
color-field painting. Helen Frankenthaler, Kenneth Noland, Morris
Louis do not appear and might never have existed. Instead the
narrative goes straight from Abstract Expressionism to Pop.
</p>
<p> Granted, the old Greenbergian version of Modernism--the idea
that art advances by shedding its superfluities and ending up
in a state of idealized blandness, flat frontal sheets of color,
a discourse of the medium alone--cuts no ice today. Granted,
too, the recoil from such prescriptions was both inevitable
and justified. And yet color-field painting did produce some
very beautiful and rigorous works, and it is hard to see how
an exhibition that includes six Jasper Johnses and five Andy
Warhols could not have found room for a Morris Louis Unfurled
or a Kenneth Noland target.
</p>
<p> The show gets imprisoned by its own generalizations. It's good
that a serious attempt has been made to set pre-Abstract Expressionist
painting before an English public. But American art in the 1920s
is defined too narrowly, as being "about" cities, industry and
visions (ironic or not) of progress based on technology. Its
mystico-romantic landscape imagery gets edited out. See Marsden
Hartley through his heraldic Cubist-based paintings of 1913-14,
such as Portrait of a German Officer, that moving, coded valentine
of homosexual love, but omit his later, grandly somber images
of the Maine coast. Have Georgia O'Keeffe's skyscrapers, not
her flowers. And, amazingly enough, leave out John Marin altogether,
however much this may distort the actual story of American art
between the world wars.
</p>
<p> Then there's the gender problem. Of the 66 artists on view,
exactly five are women: O'Keeffe, Eva Hesse, Agnes Martin, Cindy
Sherman and Jenny Holzer. You don't need to be a Guerrilla Girl
to object to this. By what contorted standards of taste could
Jonathan Borofsky's flatulent bits of pictorial free association,
or Keith Haring's cute squiggle salads, be thought more original,
let alone more beautiful, than the best work of, say, Susan
Rothenberg, Nancy Graves, Elizabeth Murray or Vija Celmins?
Where are those formidable senior talents, the two Louises,
Bourgeois and Nevelson, without whom no account of the post-Surrealist
vein in America can be adequate? And what about--but enough,
enough already. One can see why there's a big self-portrait
by Philip Guston, full of weltschmerz and peeking nervously
over the top of a wall. He must have been expecting Norman of
Beijing, not the other one.
</p>
</body>
</article>
</text>