(Also note that the people in the publicity shot above, courtesy of the gallery, are NOT wearing booties.)
Monday, March 12, 2012
Curmudgeon
Sometimes I think it’s my job to be the contrarian, although
that hardly applies where Gerhard
Richter is concerned. His work and philosophy have long inspired me, so it was a special pleasure to see Corinna
Belz’s film, “Gerhard Richter
Painting,” which confirmed everything I always wanted to believe about the
artist. Belz has great understanding, both visual and intellectual, and strikes
just the right note, which films about art hardly ever do. I won’t say more,
because I’m most likely reviewing the film elsewhere, except to urge you to see
it (even twice, as I did) at Film Forum, where it opens on Wednesday and runs through the 27th.
Also I learned, from watching Richter doing interviews in
the film, how to answer impossible questions.
Which of his painting styles does he prefer? “It varies,” he says. What
is his response to fame? “It varies.” So
helpful! Now when people ask me how much time I spend in the country or the
city, I can say, “It varies.” Which do I enjoy most, painting or writing? “It varies.”
So now for the curmudgeon part—are you sitting down?
Prepared for a terrible shock? Okay,
here goes…I am not a fan of Cindy Sherman.
This is almost as huge as admitting I liked some of Damien Hirst’s spots, but I
have always thought of Sherman’s work not as feminist, but anti-female, even
mocking—clichés of women as established by the male world. Unlike the women I
care about, her permutations are not warm, nurturing, sympathetic, or even
sexual. Would you choose any of them to
be your best friend? I didn’t think so.
I may also be prejudiced because I remember how, just before Sherman made her film stills in the seventies, Eleanor Antin was transforming herself in photographs in ways
that were more haunting, funny, varied and complex—as well as more human. Where
Antin was clearly on a quest for self-knowledge, Sherman’s portraits come off
as unflattering commentary on the aspirations and ways of life of
others--especially in this series, which
still strikes me as ageist, sexist, and just plain mean. (I’m plagiarizing
myself here, as I wrote about this in an earlier post.)
And on, curmudgeonly, to Doug
Wheeler’s sleeper show of the year, which had people braving the winter chill,
lining up around the block to be admitted into the David Zwirner gallery, five at a
time. Before going further, I want to
make it clear that I found the piece admirable, and waited to write about it because
I didn’t want to interfere with anyone’s experience of it. If there’s a single
form of art that has engaged me to the point of indefatigable research, it's this, “light and space” as it is called, the art of atmospheric environment, as
exemplified by the work of Robert Irwin,
Olafur
Eliasson, James
Turrell—as well as Fred
Sandback, whose work, though not directly involved with light, engages the
viewer in similar ways.
One of the things that impressed me most about Olafur’s
famous weather
project at the Tate Modern, is
how he gave thought to every aspect of the experience, from the pre-publicity
and catalogue (neither of which contained images or descriptions of the work,
to the length of its run (when asked by the museum to keep it up longer, he
refused). Through my study of his work I
took on this hyper-criticality, which has contributed to my campaign against
artist’s statements and museum wall text, as they often to serve to direct and limit
how work is experienced. So, for instance, while I admire Turrell, I began to
see his requirement that viewers remove their shoes and put on Tyvek booties before entering
certain installations, as a not only part of the experience, but an unpleasant
one—even a form of subjugation on the artist’s part, as they make you look
stupid.
I also dislike having to circumvent black curtains or don
headphones.
So for me, the Doug Wheeler experience began with Ken Johnson’s rave
review in the Times, after which everyone was
talking about it, then the happily chatty and anticipatory cue along West 19th
Street, which began forming at least a half hour before the gallery opened. Once
being allowed to enter the building, five at a time (throughout we were attended
by a bevy of friendly, courteous gallery assistants, each more beautiful than
the next), we were ushered into a room to wait our turn, sitting on wooden folding
chairs (or in my case, a scarily wobbly shared bench next to the wall) arranged
in a square so that we faced each other, as in Quaker meeting.
From there, again five at a time, we were invited leave our
bags in a pile, take off our shoes and put on white booties similar to Turrell’s,
which folded around our ankles like oversize institutional house slippers.
But then there was the space Wheeler created. With no
evidence of floor, ceiling, or walls, it was like being suspended in air. When
we went in, the slowly changing light was white. I tiptoed as far as I could
go, stopping, as instructed, when the floor sloped up, and stood immersed, as
if by fog.
Heaven, yes, but with refugees from an insane asylum, as
everyone was moving slowly and their booties caused them to shuffle. The effect
of the lighting was so much like that of seamless photography background paper
that everyone looked like part of a fashion shoot, and thus highlighted became inadvertent
performers.
Roberto and I became fascinated with a young woman in our midst who was
shuffling about in a particularly distracted way. Everything about her was
slack—her mouth hung slightly open, rumpled clothing fell loosely over her heavy
frame, and her hair looked as if she just gotten out of bed—in marked contrast
to the art students she came with and the fashionable gallerinas. Roberto dubbed her
Sloppy Girl. “Meds,” he whispered to me. Who was she? What was she doing there?
Was she going to be okay?
Ultimately Sloppy Girl is what we
remember and still talk about—not, perhaps what the artist intended.
(Also note that the people in the publicity shot above, courtesy of the gallery, are NOT wearing booties.)
(Also note that the people in the publicity shot above, courtesy of the gallery, are NOT wearing booties.)
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3 comments:
good post! By the way, I'm also resistent to donning headphones in galleries. Something unseemly about it, and too often they smell icky.
Carol,
Thank you for giving voice to everything I feel about Sherman and her work. I'm no fan of the wealthy ladies with too much makeup and jewelry in real life, so I do get her point, but Sherman's versions were made by a young woman with no sympathy or understanding for a culture that is not kind to women, and less kind still to women past middle age. (If all those ladies have is looks, no wonder they are trying so hard.) I'm curious to see, now that Sherman is heading into the other side of middle age (born 1954), if she will continue to create her mockeries--indeed, if she will be able to. I will say that I'm interested to see what come next.
Thank you so much for this post. Sometimes there is much ado about so little and the reverse is also true.
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