Friday, March 29, 2013
Life on display: Tilda Swinton at MoMA
To rephrase Karl Marx’s
famous quote, “History repeats itself, first as art, second as farce” (Thank you, Peter Frank)
I was in a gallery somewhere in Chelsea last week, a group
show—I've conveniently blocked out exactly where—when I had to walk around
someone lying under a blanket on the floor, supposedly a work of art. And I
thought, OMG, when will it end? When will people stop thinking this is new
already? Maybe it was interesting once, but now it’s just annoying.
Moments like that make me ashamed for the art world. But
then there was Sigur Rós Monday night at Madison Square Garden. A band of three that
collaborates with 20-30 classically trained musicians who’ve been influenced by
rock and traditional Icelandic music, Sigur Rós’s sound is
uncategorizable (more info and video here). Without a word of English except Jonsi’s modest “Thank you for
coming,” their synergy of music and projected visuals was so emotionally
calibrated that it kept the audience of more than 15,000 transfixed for two
hours, and at the end—taking it down perfectly by concluding with the same
piece they started with—stunned (everyone, that is, except the Times’s Ben Ratlif, who must have a ear of
tin and a heart of stone). It was a singular human achievement, which is what I
want from art, not just someone lying on the floor.
Friday, March 22, 2013
For the Men Who Still Don't Get It
The current state of feminism has occupied my mind lately,
not the least because a poem I wrote 20 years ago, essentially a feminist
manifesto, has gone viral. I never posted it, as it was written before the rise
of the Internet, but it’s in Aloud:
Voices from the Nuyorican Poets Cafe, which won the American Book Award
in 1994 and is still in print. The good news (for those older women who have lamented what they perceive as a lack of feminist fire in the younger generation) is that it’s young
women who are posting it. The bad news is that it indicates that women’s
experience has barely changed in 20 years. In this case, it's not fun to have written a poem that stands the test of time.
I wrote it after my fellow poet, Denise Duhamel, and I
were two of four judges in a poetry slam
at the Nuyorican. A couple of very young guys had just performed a piece that referenced women’s genitals
in a derogatory way, and Denise and I caused a ruckus because we insisted on
abstaining from voting; we felt our job was to rate the quality of the poem,
not the content, and in this case the content was, to us, unacceptable. For the Men Who Still Don’t Get It,
which I performed the next week, was an attempt to get them to see the world
from our point of view. And, some of them told me afterward, it worked.
For the Men Who Still Don’t Get It
(Carol Diehl)
What if
all women were
bigger and stronger than you
and thought they
were smarter
What if
women were the
ones who started wars
What if
too many of your
friends had been raped by women wielding giant dildos
and no K-Y Jelly
What if
the state trooper
who pulled you
over on the New Jersey Turnpike
was a woman
and carried a gun
What if
the ability to
menstruate
was the
prerequisite for most high-paying jobs
What if
your attractiveness
to women depended
on the size of
your penis
What if
every time women
saw you
they'd hoot and
make jerking motions with their hands
What if
women were always
making jokes
about how ugly
penises are
and how bad sperm
tastes
What if
you had to
explain what's wrong with your car
to big sweaty
women with greasy hands
who stared at
your crotch
in a garage where
you are surrounded
by posters of
naked men with hard-ons
What if
men's magazines
featured cover photos
of 14-year-old
boys
with socks
tucked into the
front of their jeans
and articles
like:
"How to tell
if your wife is unfaithful"
or
"What your
doctor won't tell you about your prostate"
or
"The truth
about impotence"
What if
the doctor who
examined your prostate
was a woman
and called you
"Honey"
What if
you had to inhale
your boss's stale cigar breath
as she insisted
that sleeping with her
was part of the
job
What if
you couldn't get
away because
the company dress
code required
you wear shoes
designed to keep
you from running
And what if
after all that
women still
wanted you
to love them.
On success, and other maladies....
After I wrote in a recent post about how, in the mid-eighties, seeing Basquiat's work caused me to stop exhibiting my paintings, a Facebook friend responded: " ...too bad, but understandable. You shouldn't have
stopped, Carol."
Maybe, but I had to.
Looking back, I know I absolutely could not have worked out what I
did if I’d stayed in the ring. I needed to abandon all other considerations,
all other expectations. Success gets a bad
rap these days but in its right place, I’m all for it. The success I had early
on was the encouragement I needed to define myself as an artist. Success can
often make you bigger and better, as you rise to occasions, meet expectations,
and surprise yourself by going beyond them. It made me an artist. But then
there came a time when the only way to get at the nub of what I was doing was
to give it all up, even actively work against any possibility of outside
interest. With no one watching, I had complete freedom to fail—or maybe “flail” is a better word. That 10-year period of working undercover culminated in the journal paintings, and
another significant burst of public activity that lasted several years. The final paintings in
that series, exhibited at Gary
Snyder in 2002, represented the apex of more than 30 years of work. Afterward, having
developed them as far as they could go, I needed to regroup, start from zero. This meant
withdrawing again, as I felt unable to “find myself” or evolve as an artist in public. I'm
not saying this is true for everyone, just what was true for me, and not a path
I'd necessarily recommend, as it can be rather uncomfortable. It has helped that writing, an activity I see entirely as "research" for my
painting, has enabled me to stay in the general conversation, whether my
painting is or not. And believe me, all this is clear only in
retrospect; I had no idea what I was doing at the time or why. It was simply
what I had to do to keep my process interesting to me, to keep it alive and myself
engaged. And right now I’m more engaged than ever. I’m also confident that I’ve
finally learned enough about myself and my process that I can sustain it in or
out of the public eye.
Carol Diehl, Resolutions (Blue Quad), 2002, oil on canvas, 96" x 82".
Carol Diehl, untitled (as yet), 2013, graphite and ink on paper, 12" x 16".
Friday, March 15, 2013
March 15 reflections
Exactly 37 years ago, on the Ides of March, I moved from
Chicago to New York to work as John Coplans’ assistant at
Artforum. At the CAA convention in Chicago a couple of
months before, manning the booth for The New Art Examiner, I
met Coplans and asked him to let me know if he heard of a job in New York. Mind
you, I had no intention of moving anywhere; I said it because I
wanted to appear worldlier than my young, green, Midwestern self. I wanted
to see what it would feel like to be someone who would actually say things like
that.
So when Coplans called and offered me the job I was stunned.
He also gave me only three days to decide and ten days to get myself there. My
children were in Chicago, living with my husband—how could I leave? But my artist friends were insistent. At the time Artforum
was the sun that rose and set on the art world; it was like being invited
to Oz by the Wizard himself. A creature of the suburbs and married at 19, I didn't know New York, had never
been to the museums and galleries I’d read about, so decided that if I could
find a place to stay, I’d go for a couple of months and treat it like a work/study program.
Coplans could always find another assistant.
When I called Spanish artist Àngels
Ribé, who’d spent time in Chicago, and asked if she knew of an
apartment, she said she was looking for a roommate. It seemed meant to
be—except Àngels lived on the Bowery. My friend, Barry
Holden, had visited her there, so I asked him, “Aren’t there like bums and
stuff on the Bowery?” “Oh no,” he said, “it’s been gentrified. There are
galleries and boutiques all up and down.” (This was 1976.)
My friends who worked at the Museum of Contemporary Art packed my
stereo system like art and I took it on the plane with me, along with my
suitcases (those were the days!). When the taxi dropped me off in front of 331
Bowery, Àngels didn’t answer my ring, and as I waited, my boxes attracted the
curiosity of the denizens of the street who surrounded me. I looked around for
the galleries and boutiques but didn’t see any. Maybe they were on the next
block. I tried to drag my belongings into the ground-floor shop but the owner wasn’t
having it. Could I use the door that entered into the hallway? “It doesn’t
work,” he said, “hasn’t since the fire.” When was the fire? “Last Thursday.”
Finally Àngels came bouncing down the street in the company
of one of (I found out later) a string of handsome boy friends, and they helped
me take my things upstairs. The next day, having stepped over a drunk on the
floor of our foyer, I took the subway to the Artforum offices on Madison Avenue. When later I asked Coplans why
he gave me so little time to make the move, he said, “I knew if I gave you more, you wouldn’t come.” And when, after having searched the Bowery from one
end to the other, I asked Barry about the galleries and boutiques, he said, “I
knew if I told you the truth, you wouldn’t go.”
JOHN COPLANS, Self portrait,
(SP 8 88), Front Hand Pinched,1988, photograph, ed. 12, circa 52x64cm
Saturday, March 9, 2013
Best Chelsea art day ever
JEAN-MICHEL BASQUIAT
Untitled (Julius Caesar on Gold), 1981
Acrylic and oil paintstick on canvas
50 x 50 inches (127 x 127 cm)
© The Estate of Jean-Michel Basquiat/ADAGP, Paris, ARS, New York 2013
Every year at this time my friend, Terry Perk, comes from England
with his students from the University for the Creative Arts and I take them on a gallery tour of Chelsea. Last year the
art was so bad I was embarrassed for New York. This year it was a feast,
although really, the
Basquiats
alone would have made the trip worthwhile. Terry says they don’t really know Basquiat in England; there have been
no major shows, and the printed images give no indication of their power.
Basquiat had a formidable effect on my life – to the point that in the mid-1980s I stopped painting and withdrew from the gallery I was about to join. I envied the freedom in his work and hated what I saw as orderliness and constraint in mine. I thought, “If I can’t do that, why bother?” My absence from the studio lasted only a few months, but I would not show for another ten years, which was how long it took me to learn to appreciate what was, if uncomfortably, indelibly mine. My method was to make paintings so personal that no one would be interested in exhibiting them. Proof of this is that my first painting from that time, All the Numbers in My Head includes my Social Security number and my AmEx number. I had used writing in my paintings since 1976, but often it was obscured. Now, since I was sure no one was going to see them, I could be more revealing. Eventually they turned into paintings derived from my journals that were ultimately shown at the same gallery I'd been talking to ten years before – although that was pure coincidence since, in the interim, the gallery had a complete change of personnel. Seeing the Basquiats today, those spooky Boettis down the street—preceded by the work of Suzan Frecon and the late Alan Uglow, artists with whom I’ve had connections in the past—is almost too much to process. All of those exhibitions I’ve now been to several times, each visit more satisfying than the next, as well as the transfixing video by Ragnar Kjartansson at Luhring Augustine, with whom my relationship is, at least as yet, uncomplicated.
Basquiat had a formidable effect on my life – to the point that in the mid-1980s I stopped painting and withdrew from the gallery I was about to join. I envied the freedom in his work and hated what I saw as orderliness and constraint in mine. I thought, “If I can’t do that, why bother?” My absence from the studio lasted only a few months, but I would not show for another ten years, which was how long it took me to learn to appreciate what was, if uncomfortably, indelibly mine. My method was to make paintings so personal that no one would be interested in exhibiting them. Proof of this is that my first painting from that time, All the Numbers in My Head includes my Social Security number and my AmEx number. I had used writing in my paintings since 1976, but often it was obscured. Now, since I was sure no one was going to see them, I could be more revealing. Eventually they turned into paintings derived from my journals that were ultimately shown at the same gallery I'd been talking to ten years before – although that was pure coincidence since, in the interim, the gallery had a complete change of personnel. Seeing the Basquiats today, those spooky Boettis down the street—preceded by the work of Suzan Frecon and the late Alan Uglow, artists with whom I’ve had connections in the past—is almost too much to process. All of those exhibitions I’ve now been to several times, each visit more satisfying than the next, as well as the transfixing video by Ragnar Kjartansson at Luhring Augustine, with whom my relationship is, at least as yet, uncomplicated.
Carol Diehl, January, 1997
Oil on canvas, 36" x 36"
Oil on canvas, 36" x 36"
To see:
John Byam /
Edlin / 134 Tenth Ave. / thru 3/16
Alan Uglow
organized by Bob Nickas / Zwirner / 519 W 19 / thru 3/23
Suzan Frecon /
Zwirner / 525 W 19 /
Matthew
Weinstein; Elger Esser / Sonnabend / 536 W 22 /
Alighiero
Boetti / Gladstone / 515 W 24 /
Ragnar
Kjartansson / Luhring Augustine / 531 W 24 / thru 3/18
Andrew Masullo
/ Boone / 541 W 24 / thru 4/27
Jean-Michel
Basquiat / Gagosian / 555 W 24 / thru 4/6
Thomas
Nozkowski / Pace / 508 W 25 / thru 3/23
Thomas
Nozkowski (drawings) / Pace / 511 W 25
Anthony McCall; James White / Kelly / 475
Tenth Avenue @ 36
Saturday, March 2, 2013
Boetti and me
The Alighiero
e Boetti exhibition is at Gladstone Gallery until
March 23rd, and I have been twice. My life has been full of so many unexplainable synchronistic events that I don’t know why I should be surprised
when another crops up, but my relationship to this artist is one of the spookiest.
As I wrote
previously, I didn’t know Boetti’s work until my dealer at the time, Frank
del Deo of Hirshl & Adler, pointed out that some of my paintings were
nearly identical to his. This was in 1995; Boetti died in 1994. Of course I
looked up his work, and—yikes!—it was like looking at myself. The
configuration, the colors, the stylized letters were the same—the only
difference was that the Boettis were embroidered and mine were painted. Okay,
it could just be those few paintings, but the more I learned about Boetti, the
more similarities I found. At the recent MoMA retrospective,
for instance, I discovered that he had employed the same way of writing script
over script to obscure it that I had, and that he made works with round Avery press-on
labels – which I have drawers full. The physical proportion of all of our
work is nearly the same. Even the pieces I didn’t do anything like feel
familiar, like something I could have done had I followed the thread. This time
at Gladstone I found walls full of small pieces that echo a moment in my life
when I made small square gridded paintings with friends’ names as gifts….every
time I see a piece of his, it’s a shock, like unexpectedly catching a glimpse
of myself in a mirror. And what does it all mean? Absolutely nothing. That’s
the weirdest part.
Carol Diehl, Journal of a Year, 1995, oil on canvas, one panel of four, each 80" x 48"
OGGI VENTICINQUESIMO
GIORNO OTTAVO MESE DELL ANNO MILLE NOVE 100 OTTANTOTTO ALL AMATO PANTHEON
INCONTRI E SCONTRI (1988), embroidery on fabric; 40 1/2 x 43 1/2 inches
(102.9 x 110.5 cm). Courtesy Gladstone Gallery.
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