Duane Michals, Rigamarole,
2012, Tintype with hand-applied oil paint, 14 x 10 inches (Fred is the name of his partner of 53 years)
In addition to Gerhard
Richter and Leonard
Cohen, I can add photographer, poet, and painter Duane Michals, now 81, to
the list of artists I want to be like in later life who, rich with years of accumulated
experience, are now better at their craft than ever and still growing. Duane,
whose exhibition of painted photographs is on view at D.C. Moore Gallery
through April 27th, was one of my earliest influences. In the early 70s, when I
was just beginning to paint, I saw his work in books at the Museum of Contemporary Art in Chicago,
and was struck by their peculiarity, inventiveness, and tender emotion. These
were stories told with staged photographs, later underscored with enigmatic
handwritten notes, and even later, painted embellishments. (He was also
unafraid to depict a sweet, unabashed homosexuality that was ahead of its
time.) I was then so careful and self-conscious about everything I did, it
impressed me that he was willing to scrawl on his photographs with such an unaffected hand. Along with the paintings of Joan Snyder, which I discovered around
the same time, they inspired me, in 1976, to begin incorporating words into my
work. After I came to New York we were involved with the same gallery, Sidney Janis, and
collaborated on projects for Art &
Antiques (then a truly literary magazine, whose editors encouraged me to
invent stories around ideas rather than events), for which Duane photographed Nam
June Paik, George Segal, Louise Nevelson, and James Rosenquist.
At his interview and book-signing Thursday at the gallery, Duane admitted that his theme is love, and said that he didn't think he'd captured it
yet. I don’t think of myself as particularly emotional, but when I stood to
mention the early piece I feel perfectly embodies that sentiment, This photograph is my proof (1974), I
surprised myself by getting all choked up. I can’t think of another work of art
(outside of Cat Stevens’ song, “Wild World,” which just
has too many personal associations) that could affect me like that.
Random notes from the evening:
Poetry is the courage to speak out loud.
Creative people never solve their problem; it's like an itch you can't
scratch.
When you get older you should be completely silly.
The old fool does something because it's real and true.
I never learned the limits of photography because I didn't go to
photography school and had nothing to unlearn.
Poetry is only a suggestion, a hint, a simulacra.
Facts lie more than poets, and poets lie all the time.
On his own poetry: I was forced to write about what you couldn’t see in the photograph.
You always have to be on the edge of failure, teetering on disaster.
When painters get involved in photography, it's like slumming.
Before the Cubists, there were no Cubists.
There was no precedent for Cubism, and it still reverberates.
I don't like art where I have to participate—participation is the last
refuge of the scoundrel.
You can't be too rich, too thin, or have too many idiosyncrasies.
Art is all about freeing yourself, and becoming vulnerable.
Your poetry lies in your failure and vulnerability—otherwise you're
not a poet.
Schedule? I can only write when I'm moved to write, paint when I’m
moved to paint.
I recommend becoming an old person.
"This photograph is my proof. There was that afternoon when things were still good between us, and she embraced me, and we were so happy. It did happen. She did love me. Look see for yourself!" Duane Michals, 1974.
A description of the exhibition from The New Yorker here.
An unattributed profile from the current permutation of Art & Antiques here.
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