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Author Topic: Andy Warhol's Art of Sloth  (Read 392 times)
Anastasia
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« on: November 12, 2009, 06:34:PM »

  Interesting article on modern art, Warhol specifically. This is part of a trend in the last 50 years where the more "original" the Arts, the better. But both classical-style music and architechture have come a long way in the last few years, I wonder why painting and sculpture have taken so long to catch up?

 
Andy Warhol's Art of Sloth 
by John Zmirak     
11/11/09 
 
"'Charles,' said Cordelia, 'Modern Art is all bosh, isn't it?'"
"'Great bosh.'"
-- Brideshead Revisited
 
You needn't be quite so blithe as Evelyn Waugh's Charles Ryder to know that visual art has gone far astray in the past 100 years. While the works of individual geniuses still arrest us with their idiosyncratic beauty -- painters like di Chirico, Chagall, and Schiele come to mind -- in the vast bulk of what has been accepted as worthy, "interesting" art by critics, teachers, galleries, and collectors, beauty is beside the point. Indeed, the very word is sneered at, conflated with mere prettiness, and disdained as the sort of thing that philistine, bourgeois dunderheads look at and nod, saying: "I don't know much about art, you know, but I do know what I like!" "Beauty" is relegated to beauty magazines and the 19th-century prints that seventh-grade girls put up on their walls. The great tradition of representational painting, which we trace in the West back to Greece and Rome via the Renaissance and the Baroque, is conflated lazily with paintings of weepy clowns, droopy sunsets, and poker-playing dogs.
 
Instead, contemporary art features piles of trash laid out on the floor of art galleries (one such "installation" by Damien Hirst was accidentally cleared away by the janitor, God bless him), bisected sheep carcasses preserved in embalming fluid, and works like the following, described by Roger Kimball in his witty, immensely informative Art's Prospect:
 
Consider Matthew Barney, a hot young artist whose oeuvre consists of things like Field Dressing (Orifill), a video that depicts the artist "naked climbing up a pole and cables and applying dollops of Vaseline to his orifices." That description comes from Michael Kimmelman, chief art critic for The New York Times, who recently declared Barney "the most important American artist of his generation."
 
I went to college with Barney, and I never saw him climbing any of our flagpoles. Maybe you need an MFA to learn about that.
 
This isn't the place for a learned essay on how Christian theology came to renounce the iconoclasm of Moses and baptize the Classical tradition of representational art, first via simple graffiti pictures of Jesus as the Shepherd, or statues of Apollo rechristened as Christ. Suffice it to say that the Church's insistence on the goodness and orderliness of Creation, reaffirmed by the Incarnation of Christ, created a culture that valued visual beauty and didn't feel guilty about it. The dignity of the human form reflected man's creation in God's image, and even the grotesqueries of extreme suffering might be elevated by comparison with Christ's. So Western art had room alike for the tranquil Annunciations of Fra Angelico, and the war-induced nightmares of Goya. To assert that a tradition this rich and flexible is too constricting for a modern artist's vision is itself an act of philistine pig-ignorance that only the graduate of an expensive art school could commit.
 
 
A happy exception is the Boston School tradition, whose painters actually did train other painters in . . . how to paint. Carrying on the legacy of John Singer Sargent, they provided formal training in classical realism to a small number of artists, who passed it along to others. Most of them make their living painting portraits, although an increasing number are now being hired to illuminate neo-traditional churches.
 
The great rebels against the Tradition, beginning with the Impressionists, themselves had first been forced to master figurative drawing -- so that their departures from it might, and often did, mean something. But their influence on art education meant that the next generation never learned the techniques of Renaissance and Baroque painting, so the chain of craftsmanship was effectively broken.
 
Indeed, most contemporary artists come of age never learning how to draw. Sharp young art critic James Panero quotes Randall Jarrell's novelized memoir of teaching art at Sarah Lawrence College way back in the 1940s (Jarrell calls it "Benton"):
 
If you had given a Benton student a pencil and a piece of paper, and asked her to draw something, she would have looked at you in helpless astonishment: it would have been plain to her that you knew nothing about art.
 
In his hilarious dismissal of the whole of modern art, The Painted Word, Tom Wolfe makes the case that ideologies of various sorts have replaced Creation as the subject matter of art in our time. One no longer paints portraits of the poor, like Millet's, or even of suffering workers, as Diego Rivera did. Instead, the truly modern (or postmodern) artist depicts ideas or ideological constructs such as "suffering," "struggle," or even "the Dialectic." The next step in the artist's secession from external reality comes when his own struggle becomes the subject of the art. A lingering Romantic myth of the artist not as a patient craftsmen but a genius possessed, a tortured Promethean rebel, helped fuel in the 1950s the fascination with "action" painters like Jackson Pollock.
 
Of course, there really is nothing intrinsically interesting about a single tortured soul -- except perhaps as the object of our compassion. If the artist, not the art, is now the point, then why not choose, instead of anguish, irony? Painters such as Roy Liechtenstein crafted on enormous canvases recreations of strips from comic books, and the critics and collectors lined up to jack up the prices of his paintings -- as reflected in the ever-reliable Art Market Index, which I'll note always outperforms the Standard & Poor's. So instead of the infinitely complex, visually demanding world of man in nature, the subject matter of art became the jaded sensibility of the artist.
 
 
Enter Andy Warhol. Born in working-class Pittsburgh the son of a Byzantine Catholic coal miner, Warhol was a sickly, effeminate child. He took refuge from bullying and ostracism in an obsession with Hollywood movie stars and other trinkets of popular culture. Trained as a commercial illustrator, Warhol had a little more practice drawing actual objects than the graduates of Jarrell's Benton, although his skills ran to pictures of products rather than people. So it's not surprising that when he made his strategic move into the addled world of Art, those things are what he chose to draw. They are also very easy to draw, and Warhol never pretended to spend much time on the work he exhibited. Indeed, what quickly made a media sensation was not so much his banal reproductions of soup cans, Coke bottles, and silkscreen portraits of Mao as his unique persona -- the languid, affectless dispenser of ironic, iconic quips, such as:
 
•"In the future, everyone will be famous for 15 minutes."
•"Fantasy love is much better than reality love. Never doing it is very exciting. The most exciting attractions are between two opposites that never meet."
•"I love Los Angeles. I love Hollywood. They're so beautiful. Everything's plastic, but I love plastic. I want to be plastic."
•"Just look at the surface of my paintings and films and me, and there I am. There's nothing behind it."
•"I suppose I have a really loose interpretation of 'work,' because I think that just being alive is so much work at something you don't always want to do. The machinery is always going. Even when you sleep."
•"Art is what you can get away with."
Warhol's Instamatic success reminds one of Oscar Wilde's premature fame, which came before he'd produced much work of note, as the fruit of his campy public appearances and acerbic commentaries on current events. (The difference, of course, being that Wilde was a tireless craftsman; it takes a lot of work to look that effortless -- at least, it did in Wilde's time.)
 
It's dreary to recount the parade of celebrities and hangers-on who trooped through Warhol's art "Factory" in search of fame, sexual hook-ups, or a better grade of dope. What matters is Warhol's attitude toward art, which he made clear with his series of urine paintings, made by oxidizing a canvas so it would react with body fluids, then taking turns with his epicene male companions in relieving themselves on it.
 
And the critics drank it up. In an essay that really, really should be the last word on the subject, "Drunk on Andy Warhol," Kimball pays a long visit to the vast and expensive Andy Warhol Museum in Pittsburgh, sorting through the garish ephemera of Warhol's lifelong production. This alone is worth the purchase price of Art's Prospect, but then Kimball opens the museum's catalog:
 
One essay is by the American philosopher Arthur Danto, who for many years has been a champion of Andy Warhol, both as an artist and -- a more provocative claim -- as a thinker. In the essay he contributed to the catalog, Professor Danto reaffirms his high opinion. It all started in 1964 when he saw the exhibition of Warhol's Brillo Boxes at the Stable Gallery in New York. Since then, he writes, he has felt that Warhol possessed "a philosophical intelligence of an intoxicatingly high order."
 
Andy Warhol got away with it. A manipulative sexual voyeur of minimal talent who never worked very hard, he grabbed the imagination of a deeply confused, postwar cultural world, and for three decades lived at the pinnacle of society. His paintings -- often consigned, dismissively, to be actually crafted by his assistants -- still sell for millions. Two separate museums are dedicated to him, a bridge in Pittsburgh is named for him, and there is actually something called the Andy Warhol Art Authentication Board, to help prospective speculators on the Art Market Index ascertain that their soup cans really are by Andy, instead of Campbell's.
 
There are even some well-meaning, addled Catholics desperate for secular validation trying to claim Warhol as a postmodern Catholic artist -- citing the fact that the deeply superstitious Warhol sometimes attended Mass, and in his later years scrawled some cringeworthy, cartoonish imitations of DaVinci's The Last Supper. And the Warhol Industry encourages them. Kimball notes how the museum catalog sprinkles its philosophical elaborations on Warhol's deadpan pranks with Catholic terminology. Citing along the way the titles of two of Warhol's cinéma vérité efforts, which I'll coyly here render as Bl** Job and F***, Kimball quotes the effusions of chief curator Mark Francis, who said that Warhol's urine paintings
 
continued to refer to his preoccupations with the human body, the exchange of value between money and objects, and what can only be described as a religious desire for communion and human interaction. . . . The Oxidations are metaphors for transubstantiation, the transformation of base metals into precious objects.
 
And despite his blasphemous rhetoric, Francis is right. No man in history, not even P. T. Barnum, could equal Andy Warhol for turning crap into cash.
 

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
John Zmirak is the author, most recently, of the graphic novel The Grand Inquisitor and is Writer-in-Residence at Thomas More College in New Hampshire. He writes weekly for InsideCatholic.com.
 
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« Reply #1 on: November 12, 2009, 07:21:PM »

So, so true.

Great read.
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AMDG-IHS

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« Reply #2 on: November 12, 2009, 08:08:PM »

Speaking of Warhol, take a look at this:

http://artdaily.com/index.asp?int_sec=2&int_new=34244

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« Reply #3 on: November 13, 2009, 01:57:AM »

Speaking of Warhol, take a look at this:

http://artdaily.com/index.asp?int_sec=2&int_new=34244

Sick.
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"O MARY, conceived without sin, pray for us who have recourse to thee."

"Teach them that just as there is only one God, one Christ, one Holy Spirit, so there is also only one truth which is divinely revealed. There is only one divine faith which is the beginning of salvation for mankind and the basis of all justification, the faith by which the just person lives and without which it is impossible to please God and to come to the community of His children. There is only one true, holy, Catholic church, which is the Apostolic Roman Church. There is only one See founded in Peter by the word of the Lord, outside of which we cannot find either true faith or eternal salvation. He who does not have the Church for a mother cannot have God for a father, and whoever abandons the See of Peter on which the Church is established trusts falsely that he is in the Church." - Pius IX, Singulari Quidem.
devotedknuckles
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« Reply #4 on: November 13, 2009, 05:02:AM »

Didn't worhal die reconciled with the church?
So I've been told
Sip
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« Reply #5 on: November 13, 2009, 07:02:AM »

Didn't worhal die reconciled with the church?

Good for his soul.

His "art", though, is still a disgrace and a mockery of true art.
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"O MARY, conceived without sin, pray for us who have recourse to thee."

"Teach them that just as there is only one God, one Christ, one Holy Spirit, so there is also only one truth which is divinely revealed. There is only one divine faith which is the beginning of salvation for mankind and the basis of all justification, the faith by which the just person lives and without which it is impossible to please God and to come to the community of His children. There is only one true, holy, Catholic church, which is the Apostolic Roman Church. There is only one See founded in Peter by the word of the Lord, outside of which we cannot find either true faith or eternal salvation. He who does not have the Church for a mother cannot have God for a father, and whoever abandons the See of Peter on which the Church is established trusts falsely that he is in the Church." - Pius IX, Singulari Quidem.
spasiisochrani

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« Reply #6 on: November 13, 2009, 07:55:AM »

Didn't worhal die reconciled with the church?
So I've been told
Sip


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devotedknuckles
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« Reply #7 on: November 13, 2009, 08:08:AM »

Yes indeed. I wasn't defending his trash. I was just told this not to long ago so it was fresh on my mind. Anyhoo
Sip
I actually thought he was jew until like a week or so ago LOL.
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"I do not like this word "bomb." It is not a bomb. It is a device that is exploding."
- French ambassador to New Zealand Jacques le Blanc, regarding press coverage of France's nuclear weapons tests in the Pacific

http://www.martinjetpack.com/

http://www.mugshotmuseum.com/
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« Reply #8 on: November 13, 2009, 08:15:AM »

From what I understand, Warhol was a regular Mass attendee.
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cgraye

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« Reply #9 on: November 13, 2009, 02:40:PM »

But both classical-style music and architechture have come a long way in the last few years

They have?  I wasn't aware of any recent developments in these arts.  Can you give some examples?
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Chris
Anastasia
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« Reply #10 on: November 13, 2009, 03:50:PM »

But both classical-style music and architechture have come a long way in the last few years

They have?  I wasn't aware of any recent developments in these arts.  Can you give some examples?
I don't have any specific examples for architecture, just that the recently built ones seem to be going back to classical forms. I haven't seen one of those generic 60's era offices in a long time.
Musically, there are now good choral composers like Eric Whitacre and Lauridsen, and a lot of film-music composers like Howard Shore and Bear McCreary.
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« Reply #11 on: November 14, 2009, 08:00:AM »

You have to acknowledge that the man was one of the most significant American cultural catalyst of the 20th Century; adept at manipulating others into doing his work, into loving or hating him, and ultimately duping the art establishment into admitting that it really is just a commercial enterprise just like any other.  It was his intention to be an outrage, and he succeeded.  I think it's hilarious that anybody takes him seriously.
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stvincentferrer

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« Reply #12 on: November 14, 2009, 08:23:AM »

Indeed, most contemporary artists come of age never learning how to draw. Sharp young art critic James Panero quotes Randall Jarrell's novelized memoir of teaching art at Sarah Lawrence College way back in the 1940s (Jarrell calls it "Benton"):
 
If you had given a Benton student a pencil and a piece of paper, and asked her to draw something, she would have looked at you in helpless astonishment: it would have been plain to her that you knew nothing about art.

This reminds me of an anecdote that Tom Wolfe related in his obituary on the sculptor Frederick Hart:

Quote
By 1982, he was already involved in another competition for a huge piece of public sculpture in Washington. A group of Vietnam veterans had just obtained Congressional approval for a memorial that would pay long-delayed tribute to those who had fought in Vietnam with honor and courage in a lost and highly unpopular cause. They had chosen a jury of architects and art worldlings to make a blind selection in an open competition; that is, anyone could enter, and no one could put his name on his entry. Every proposal had to include something -- a wall, a plinth, a column -- on which a hired engraver could inscribe the names of all 57,000-plus members of the American military who had died in Vietnam. Nine of the top 10 choices were abstract designs that could be executed without resorting to that devious and accursed bit of trickery: skill. Only the No. 3 choice was representational. Up on one end of a semicircular wall bearing the 57,000 names was an infantryman on his knees beside a fallen comrade, looking about for help. At the other end, a third infantryman had begun to run along the top of the wall toward them. The sculptor was Frederick Hart.

The winning entry was by a young Yale undergraduate architectural student named Maya Lin. Her proposal was a V-shaped wall, period, a wall of polished black granite inscribed only with the names; no mention of honor, courage or gratitude; not even a flag. Absolutely skillproof, it was.

"Many veterans were furious. They regarded her wall as a gigantic pitiless tombstone that said, ''Your so-called service was an absolutely pointless disaster.'' They made so much noise that a compromise was struck. An American flag and statue would be added to the site. Hart was chosen to do the statue. He came up with a group of three soldiers, realistic down to the aglets of their boot strings, who appear to have just emerged from the jungle into a clearing, where they are startled to see Lin's V-shaped black wall bearing the names of their dead comrades.

Naturally enough, Lin was miffed at the intrusion, and so a make-peace get-together was arranged in Plainview, N.Y., where the foundry had just completed casting the soldiers. Doing her best to play the part, Lin asked Hart -- as Hart recounted it -- if the young men used as models for the three soldiers had complained of any pain when the plaster casts were removed from their faces and arms. Hart couldn't imagine what she was talking about. Then it dawned on him. She assumed that he had followed the lead of the ingenious art worldling George Segal, who had contrived a way of sculpturing the human figure without any skill whatsoever: by covering the model's body in wet plaster and removing it when it began to harden. No artist of her generation (she was 21) could even conceive of a sculptor starting out solely with a picture in his head, a stylus, a brick of moist clay and some armature wire. No artist of her generation dared even speculate about . . . skill. "- http://www.jeanstephengalleries.com/hart-wolfe.html


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Benno

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« Reply #13 on: November 18, 2009, 01:21:AM »

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« Reply #14 on: November 18, 2009, 09:37:AM »

I never understood people's fascination with Warhol.
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