To one ‘s shock and dismay one discovers, upon finishing
Jason Newman’s article about postmodern art, that young Newman is a student
journalist. This is shocking and dismaying because his article is so remarkably good. One
cannot imagine an American student, no less an art critic, doing as good a job.
Newman begins with a salient point. However much the world
is gaga over Andy Warhol’s Campbell’s soup can boxes and Brillo boxes—a critique
of consumer capitalism, didn’t you know?— the artist filled his own home with the real
thing, with art that had withstood the test of time:
However,
when he died in February 1987 the world got a real look at Andy Warhol and what
he really considered to be “worthwhile art.” Behind the doors of his
neo-classical townhouse the rooms were not furnished by piles of Brillo boxes
or indeed stacks of soup cans but objects of a rather different style.
Classical busts sat on mahogany tables, portraits lined the walls, and on many
surfaces sat fine antiques. Warhol had chosen to adorn his house with pieces
that had stood the test of time, pieces that followed the old rules on
aesthetic value, but most importantly pieces that would have been shunned in
the art world he had created and dominated.
What is modern art? Newman tells us that it’s a fraud, a con perpetrated on unknowing collectors who want to feel like they are part of the
intellectual elite. I know what you are thinking: it couldn't have happened to a nicer group of people.
He says:
… the
mantra of the modern artist: willing to expose society’s greed, consumerism,
and corruption so long as he receives generous compensation for doing so. The
contradictions of Andy Warhol’s public and private tastes, along with the
inherent contradictions present in modern art, expose it for what it really is
– a fraudulent enterprise that does not stand up to close scrutiny; a con
perpetrated by talentless hacks and the elitist snobs who give them both funds
and oxygen.
One feels constrained to point out that a few collectors treat these artworks like penny stocks. They buy tons of it from
young artists and hope that some of it will be worth a fortune. Of course, it’s
all a game of musical chairs. You might end up with your walls covered in junk,
looking like the biggest fool. Like the story of the Emperor’s New Clothes—dutifully
quoted by Newman—you will feel sorely inconvenienced if anyone, especially a
student journalist, tells you that it’s all junk.
Such art is offered up to the intellectual elites,
especially to the know-nothing elites called celebrities:
The
fact is that from the time of Marcel Duchamp’s urinal to Damien Hirst’s pickled
shark and beyond, the only people able to afford these modern art pieces have
been the elite. An elite who, afraid they might fall behind the latest trend,
nod their approval at a giant sculpture of a pair of buttocks (a Turner
Prize-nominee), eager to show that they, like their elite friends but unlike
the masses, “understand.”
It has all, Newman continues, lost the value to shock. It
has become boring:
The
whole modern art scene has become stale; the ugliness, the obsession with the
scatological, and the gratuitous levels of sexually explicit content are now
tiresome clichés. While conceptual artists no doubt like to see themselves as
being experimental, revolutionary, and unorthodox they have simply become
boring. From painting with it (The Holy Virgin Mary by
Chris Ofili) to tinning it (Artist’s Shit by
Piero Manzoni), the uses of faeces has well and truly been exhausted by
these charlatans. Pieces that were once seen as shocking no longer shock, the
taboo has been broken, displaying a sexual explicit piece is now no more
revolutionary than painting a bowl of fruit.
Obviously, anyone can do it. It requires very little skill
and no craft. It’s a world where talent does not matter:
Behind
the grandiose pieces and the attention grabbing works created purely for shock
value lies a very important question: “Where is the skill and ability in all
this?” No skill is required to place a rotting cows head in a glass cube with
an insect-o-cutor (A Thousand Years by
Damien Hirst). No ability is needed to set up a room with a light that switches
on and off (Work No. 227: The
Lights Going On and Off by Martin Creed, a work that won him
the Turner Prize). It is most probably the case that the electrician who
installed said lights and the abattoir worker who severed the cow’s head
possess more skill and expertise than either Mr. Hirst or Mr. Creed.
Among the intellectual patrons of this nonsense is the
Frankfurt School. The thinkers associated with this school peddled Marxist
fairy tales and wanted to stand firm against fascism. Recently, they have been
treated as near-prophets for having predicted the rise of Donald Trump. Of
course, no one cares to remark that their crystal balls became especially murky
when they failed to understand the catastrophe of Marxist governance.
Newman describes the Frankfurt School:
Like
the Dadaists, their genesis was in the interwar years but also like the
Dadaists their influence really only started to be felt in the post-War years.
They too came out of the first half of the 20th century
traumatised. They were appalled by the rise of fascism, but also crestfallen at
the failure of Marxist-Leninism to deliver utopia. Having conducted a
postmortem on Marxism, they formed their own new ideology, still heavily
influenced by Marx but with a new emphasis on the cultural rather than the
economic. Like the Dadaists, they also felt the old traditions should be thrown
on the rubbish heap of history – faith, family, and the nation had to be
destroyed. And, like the Dadaists, they were convinced the subjective was king
and objective truth was dead. Affirmation and construction were to be abandoned
for desecration and destruction.
Have these postmodern artists finally destroyed art. One
expects that they did not. One hopes that a new generation will restore the
value of art… that is, if they have the skill to do so:
Having
succeeded in destroying the underpinnings of art, declaring everything to be
art–and moreover good art–while
emptying the word ‘beautiful’ of meaning, modern artists are now stranded on an
open prairie. With no fences to restrain them or give them direction, they
wander aimlessly, often getting lost in the process. The very term “art” now
means nothing. For if everything is “art” then “art” is everything, therefore
why define it as “art” at all? Why have galleries or exhibitions?
3 comments:
Newman nails it, he does. (I await being called a Philistine.)
Stuart,
I really enjoyed this post. I don't usually recommend other sites, but this time I will:
https://remodernreview.wordpress.com/
These young people (artists) are doing more than complaining they are taking on this thing called "art". I don't think they realize what a hard thing that is to do and I think they are very brave and deserve support.
From what I've read, Warhol was a deeply devout catholic, which liberals conveniently ignore.
And though he was gay, he was supposedly quite celibate.
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