Who killed art?
The mystery is all around us. Happily, Camille Paglia is on the case.
In a recent column Paglia noted that the visual arts have
lost their aesthetic. That is, they have lost their soul.
Architects are producing buildings of surpassing beauty. Industrial
designers are filling everyone’s homes and pockets with exquisitely beautiful
objects. Opera, theatre and dance are doing wonderfully.
But then, a young visual artist drags a lump of coal across
a piece of paper and declares that he has deconstructed humanity’s carbon
footprint.
Don’t believe me? Check out Bravo’s reality series, Gallery Girls. By now the show has
mercifully been put to rest, but you can probably find it online or on On
Demand.
As soon as you get past the personal dramas of the aspiring young gallerists, you will notice two things: first, that
aesthetically interesting and engaging art is being produced… in China; second,
that young American artists are more interested in their ideas than in their
art.
Paglia summarized the trouble with contemporary visual art:
Performance
genres like opera, theater, music and dance are thriving all over the world,
but the visual arts have been in slow decline for nearly 40 years. No major
figure of profound influence has emerged in painting or sculpture since the
waning of Pop Art and the birth of Minimalism in the early 1970s.
Yet
work of bold originality and stunning beauty continues to be done in
architecture, a frankly commercial field. Outstanding examples are Frank
Gehry's Guggenheim Museum Bilbao in Spain, Rem Koolhaas's CCTV headquarters in
Beijing and Zaha Hadid's London Aquatic Center for the 2012 Summer Olympics.
She continues:
What do
contemporary artists have to say, and to whom are they saying it?
Unfortunately, too many artists have lost touch with the general audience and
have retreated to an airless echo chamber. The art world, like humanities
faculties, suffers from a monolithic political orthodoxy—an upper-middle-class
liberalism far from the fiery antiestablishment leftism of the 1960s.
Paglia is quite correct to say that visual artists need to
learn to work with their hands. They need to get their hands dirty and to
engage with the stuff from which they make art.
To me this means that they have abandoned the aesthetic in
favor of ideas. It beats working.
Astonishingly for anyone who knows anything about art, young
visual artists seem to believe that they should be using their art to
communicate an idea… or better, to disseminate the jejune politically correct insights
that inhabit their minds.
Amazingly, young visual artists have come to believe that their
ideas have some kind of surpassing importance.
Yet, when art conveys an idea, when it has a point of view,
when its values lies in your ability to grasp the idea, then it is just
stealth propaganda.
When gazing on such works it is impossible to be engaged by
the work or challenged by it. Forget about enjoying it. You are more likely to
feel that you are being assaulted, if not insulted by it.
For my part, I question whether it really is art.
If you want to think through the issue, ask yourself what
Homer’s idea was in the Odyssey? When
Homer spoke about “rosy-fingered dawn” was he making an environmental impact
statement? Was that other great metaphor, “the wine-dark sea” an
invitation to break away the chains of custom in favor of Dionysian
revelry?
Was Giotto deconstructing theology when he painted his
altarpiece of the Madonna and child? Or was he prefiguring the rise of
capitalism?
Unless you live in Neo-Platonic hot house, art is not a
vehicle for communicating great ideas. If anything, it dramatizes moral dilemmas
in a way that is aesthetically engaging and compelling. It invites you to think; it does not tell you what to think.
If, as Paglia correctly notes, today’s artists are more
interested in producing shock than contemplation, their work lacks all but
commercial value.
In her words:
Artists
can now win attention by imitating once-risky shock gestures of sexual
exhibitionism or sacrilege. This trend began over two decades ago with Andres
Serrano's "Piss Christ," a photograph of a plastic crucifix in a jar
of the artist's urine, and was typified more recently by Cosimo Cavallaro's
"My Sweet Lord," a life-size nude statue of the crucified Christ
sculpted from chocolate, intended for a street-level gallery window in
Manhattan during Holy Week.
As for Paglia’s larger question for contemporary visual
artists: what are they saying and to whom are they saying it, the answer is not
very difficult.
The work of contemporary visual artists does have a
rationale. It is making a mockery of the people who buy it.
Visual artists are saying that the wealthy capitalists who
collect their works have no aesthetic, have no sense of beauty and will buy any piece of junk as long as it has been exhibited in an
art gallery or museum.
Artists have found a way to exploit the insecurities of the
1%.
Rich collectors do not know very much about art. They are unable to
appreciate great art, but wish merely to enhance their social status by
becoming patrons of the arts.
Artists are perfectly happy to enable them.
It’s not about what capitalism is doing to art but about
what today’s young visual artists are doing to capitalists.
Of course, many collectors are having a few laughs of their
own. For them, buying fine art is like buying penny stocks. Most will turn out
to be junk, but it only takes a few to make the investment worthwhile.
For the collectors out there, it’s a good time to trade in
your Jeff Koons and Cindy Sherman for some Old Masters.
You do not want to be left holding the empty bag when the
world discovers that its emptiness has only meaning: you don't know the
difference between great art and a great scam.
Thank you for sharing that, Stuart, it led me to find this...
ReplyDeleteWhy Beauty matters!!
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=csBzlE-PQOU&feature=plcp
Visual "artists" are not trying to please the public, or any real piece of the public. "Stick it to them" is their creed. Dance and music need money to continue, and so must please enough of the paying public to keep on keeping on.
ReplyDeleteI think that the visual arts are still doing OK, you just have to look in a different place to find them. For instance, there is a lot of great art going into the video game industry. I know that many people think of such games as mere violent toys and not worth any serious consideration, but the medium has become so much more than that and there are some outstanding titles that offer visually stunning landscapes, photo-realistic characters and an overall genuinely beautiful experience. There are games with such well done visual art that you often find yourself ignoring the actual “game” in favor of just staring at what's been painted on your screen.
ReplyDeleteA big part of this is because games are designed for the common man. And while we may not understand art we at least can recognize beauty when we see it. So, unlike high-society artists who are trying to outsmart their cultured customers, game artists have a real financial motivation to create visuals that people enjoy.
I think that Sam and Anon are making an important point.
ReplyDeleteThe art market is controlled by very, very few players. A small number of gallerists, critics, curators and collectors determine the value of the works. The fewer the players the easier it is for them to be swayed by groupthink, and the easier it is to rig the market.
Perhaps this explains why people in the art world do not trust free markets.
Art and Beauty are real, and therefore must be destroyed.
ReplyDeleteYour readers should look back a little further than video games,
and discover Theodor Adorno and the Frankfurt School.
Demoralize and Degrade.
It's there for any willing to bother looking.
Best Regards -
-shoe
PS -
"The art market is controlled by very, very few players."
for some contemporary evidence
of Adorno's end game,
look up Charles Saatchi on wiki.