Swingeing
London by Richard Hamilton, 1968-9, showing Rolling Stone Mick Jagger in
the back of a police car. © Estate of Richard Hamilton.
Other than making my own, it’s nearly impossible for me to
care about art in August. This is when nature is at it’s fullest, and very hard
to compete with. Besides, it’s too hot. I mean, who the fuck cares? I don’t
think it’s a coincidence that these days, the best art comes out of cities like
Berlin, New York, and London—as opposed to Paris and Rome—places where you need
art to improve on things. Places where, if you didn’t have art, you might go
crazy. In the recent documentary, Gerhard Richter calls Cologne, where he lives,
an ugly city. But maybe he needs
that. Maybe Cologne is the perfect foil.
It’s never too hot for gossip and controversy, however, and
right now L.A.’s MOCA is providing us with a
steady stream of both. Today the L.A. Times published an article
in defense of Director Jeffrey
Deitch, who recently
fired—or allowed the Board of Trustees to fire—long-time curator Paul
Schimmel resulting in great art world sturm
und drang (see post below as well). Unfortunately, the “defenders” quoted in the article are hardly financially
disinterested: Aaron Rose,
who co-curated “Art in the
Streets” at MOCA with Deitch, and Shepard Fairey, who has
been hired by Deitch to create a graphic identity for the museum. Under those
circumstances, what can they be expected to say? That Deitch is full of shit?
This article and, really, everything that’s been written
about the situation, makes it sound as if the issues are (blah blah, I’m so
tired of it) celebrity-driven “pop” culture, intended to introduce a “new”
audience and bring in crowds, versus “serious” programming, which is, ipso facto, “old culture,” for
aficionados only, and crushingly boring. Yet there is a middle ground, as
exemplified by the Tate
Modern and the Centre
Pompidou, which somehow manage to attract the world's largest audiences for contemporary art, without sacrificing rigor. And MoMA is packed.
On Deitch-as-curator, my feelings are mixed. By all
accounts, “Art in the Streets” was great and I'm sorry it didn't travel to
the Brooklyn Museum, as planned. Nor do I have an aversion to the idea of a
disco-themed exhibition, done properly. I’m also a big fan of Shepard Fairey,
and if I could hire him to create my graphic identity, I would. But to choose to
mount not only a Dennis
Hopper exhibition, but a James
Dean theme show, curated by James Franco, while cancelling mid-stream those
of Jack Goldstein and
Richard
Hamilton—two historic but under-recognized artists whose work would fit perfectly into the MOCA agenda—seems unconscionable. Oh, and did I
mention the upcoming Jeff Koons
retrospective? Now there’s an artist
who needs more attention….
However, none of this means anything. Deitch was hired to be
a director, not curator, and the real reason he should go is that he’s proved to be a terrible manager. This whole debacle is a
P.R. nightmare of his making. Basically,
a director’s job is to create good will and faith in the museum, inside and
out, in addition to raising the money to keep it going. It is important that donors feel confident that
the museum is being run well, is going to last, and that they‘re not
contributing to a vanity project of the principle donor, in this case, Eli
Broad. It would seem now that the only direction the museum can take to regain
credibility and confidence is to dump Deitch, tell Broad to step back, hire a strong director, and start fresh.
I hadn't thought of the whole mess in those terms, you have an excellent point!
ReplyDeleteSturm und Drang indeed! That always makes for a more exciting August. : )
ReplyDeletegood points.i agree 100%, carol
ReplyDelete