Andy Warhol, Dollar Sign, 1982
©The Andy Warhol Museum, Pittsburgh. Founding Collection, Contribution The Andy Warhol Foundation for the Visual Arts, Inc
©The Andy Warhol Museum, Pittsburgh. Founding Collection, Contribution The Andy Warhol Foundation for the Visual Arts, Inc
Jerry Saltz
on Facebook, yesterday:
We now have this enormous top-heavy operational apparatus… a
hundred art fairs and international biennials, galleries growing larger as
artists work in smaller spaces, skyrocketing prices during a worldwide economic
contraction. The art world’s reflexes are shot; its systems so predetermined
that they’re driving us; we’re no longer driving them. The system is less
susceptible to paradox, discovery, ambiguity, and all the exquisite deviations
and orphic oddness that brought us to art in the first place.
….The system may be too big NOT to fail. It is telling us what
we already know: A crystal is cracked. It is time for mutinies, forging new
topographies and plotting other courses."
Artists
are famous for pioneering new territory, making places like SoHo, TriBeCa,
Williamsburg, etc. so attractive that they’re driven out by the moneyed
interests. However now it’s bigger than that; while we were sleeping, they
co-opted the entire art world and made it one big hedge fund.
In Chicago last week, a collector friend asked me what’s going
on in art, what’s good, what’s happening, and I couldn’t begin to answer him. What’s
good? From whose point of view? Mine? Gagosian’s?
Sotheby’s? And does it
matter? The machine that is the art world is going to run regardless of whether
I, Saltz, or anyone who really thinks about art, finds it important. As in current
politics, the truth is meaningless and history never happened. So what if
another artist did the same thing better yesterday or ten years ago, or is
doing it better now in some loft in Cleveland. Like everything else, when
things become corporatized, the emphasis changes; it’s no longer about building
a better mousetrap, but how many mousetraps can we sell?
Back in
the day, the value of contemporary art was determined by an intangible, but nonetheless fairly reliable, aesthetic consensus of artists, writers, inspired dealers, curators, and collectors
crazy enough to spend money on the art they loved—with no prospect of a return,
as the secondary market was reserved for dead artists. Now value is determined
by how long you can keep the ball (or “spot” in the case of Damien Hirst) in the air.
Other than generators of product, artists aren’t part of the game. Nor are critics,
whose insistence on analyzing and qualifying is beginning to appear superfluous
at best, and at worst, downright annoying.
How great is the divide? Example: Richard Prince’s work sells for millions, yet not one artist
of my acquaintance cared enough to see his 2007 Guggenheim retrospective (I
did, but only because my press pass got me in for free), and Peter Schjeldahl wrote of him: “An adept of juvenile sarcasm, like Prince, is
well advised not to invite comparisons with grownups.”
Often
compared to the tulip
craze that took over Holland in the 1600s, one wonders if the speculative
art bubble will burst once investors find it's filled with hot air, when the tide
turns from Hirst, Prince and Koons to….? (Whatever happened to those Chinese
artists who were so hot a few years ago?) Even the seemingly grounded market in
Warhols could be upset when the Andy
Warhol Foundation (whose Creative
Capital grant is supporting this blog) disperses
its collection.
What could
unravel even sooner is the art school pyramid. For a couple of decades,
students have been willing to take on loans of $20,000 to $30,000 a year to get
a degree that would supposedly net them a tenure track teaching position worth
upwards of $50,000 a year. Now, however, that 75%
of those jobs are being filled by adjuncts making an average of $2700 per
course, with many, like Walmart
employees, having to rely
on food stamps, it seems unlikely that academia will maintain its appeal
for long.
Meanwhile,
what’s an artist to do? Saltz says it: mutiny, forge other topographies, plot
other courses…in other words, make history once again. Think the Salon des
Refuses, the Bauhaus, Black Mountain
College, New York’s Downtown Scene
in the 80s….This is not the first time artists have had to take things into
their own hands—and they will.
***
An addendum, following the comments of friends on Facebook, some of whom found merit in Prince and Koons, although I'm glad to say no one defended Hirst. That, however, is not the point. While I have no interest in Prince, I do like some Koons, and I adore Richter, who is a daily inspiration and, for me, completely deserving of his fame. However, outside of seminal historic pieces, to assess ANY work of art, even Richter’s, at millions of dollars, or even a million, is to indulge in pure speculation. No longer engaged in questions of artistic merit, every institution, from museums to art magazines, is swept up in this wild game of chance being played out by people with too much money. There were probably some pretty gorgeous tulips during the tulip craze, which is no doubt what set the whole thing off, but what happened ultimately had nothing to do with tulips.