Even more additions to our list of art trends that should be consigned to the dustbin (see posts below):
…artists doing real world things, such as setting up a store, or a bakery, or a bar, etc., and presenting it as art. (Giovanni wrote: It's a favorite at art fairs and biennials, and IT'S DRIVING ME INSANE! And yes, Rirkrit Tiravanija fits squarely into this genre, and I don't care how much Jerry Saltz loves his cooking.)
Anything related to consumerism, especially luxury objects. (K.I.A. wrote: I don't want to see any more depictions of diamonds, chandeliers, fancy wallpapered rooms, etc.)
Incomprehensible manifestos that include references to Derrida and post-structuralism.
Those who paint their houses purple, wear a silly wild hats and call themselves “outsider artists.”
Mocking religion, Republicans, and suburban consumer culture.
I will add: off-hand painting that makes it appear as if the artist is detached, not willing to make a whole-hearted commitment to either the subject or the process. The message, regardless of subject matter, is: “Look! I’m here in a gallery and I’m not even trying!” A friend calls it “poke-in-the-eye” art, as it seems to be jeering at those of us who are trying.
....and the prize for the artist whose work combines more outmoded trends than any other goes to Karen Kilimnik, at 303 Gallery of whom Guy Forget of Art Fag City says, “it’s safe to assume that the relatively ‘off-hand’ design of the 303 show is intentionally underwhelming.”
I’m an artist, writer (Art in America, ARTnews), teacher/lecturer (where invited), writing coach, and former slam poet (Nuyorican Poets Cafe), and peace advocate. My art and many of my magazine features and reviews can be found on my website: caroldiehl.com.
My book, "Banksy: Completed' was published by The MIT Press in Fall, 2021.
Along a Long Lineby Michael Glier. Interview by Carol Diehl, essay by Lisa Corrin. Hard Press Editions, Lenox MA in association with Hudson Hills Press, September 2009.
Andrew Stevovich: Essential Elements essays by Carol Diehl, Anita Shreve, Valerie Ann Leeds, John Sacret Young, Hard Press Editions, December 2007.
A Place for the Arts: The MacDowell Colony, 1907-2007, edited by Carter Wiseman with essays by Joan Acocella, Carol Diehl, Vartan Gregorian, Verlyn Klinkenborg, Robert McNeil, Robin Rausch, Ruth Reichl, Jean Valentine, Jacqueline Woodson, Kevin Young, University Press of New England, January, 2007.
Feature Articles:
The Columnist (Anne Truitt), Art in America, March, 2010.
2 comments:
Someone must have told Karen she looks like Emma Peel. She should not have taken it seriously.
If you buy a Karen Kilimnick painting, you get what you deserve.
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