Jim Falck |
Addison Parks |
Art at its best reflects on its own optical origins. Even
when it appears to be breaking away into new territory as in the work of the Impressionists
and the Post Impressionists, it is meditating on its roots that were evident in
the optics of the perspective of the Renaissance and the chiaroscuro of the early
Baroque. Western art seems to fluctuate back and forth between seminal periods
of rigorously based optically grounded art and art that takes that construct as
dogma and perceives it as reality. My favorite concept from Marxist criticism
is the notion of reification. It is used to critique concepts of social
organization that are taken for reality rather than as human inventions. It
can be applied to art when the world of Bourgeoisie, for example, is solidified into the Realism of the late 19thc. Although
used by the Marxists to accuse people of Bourgeois bad faith and to recommend
them for a curative stay in the gulag, when used to critique art it does a
pretty good job of detecting when large groups of people smugly take the shape
of things in the visual world as just the way things are.
A good example of reification was evident in the work I saw of
many, heretofore unknown to me, Realists at the Petit Palais in Paris, who
appeared to be followers of Courbet’s Social Realism. Their subjects were the
poor of Paris. One huge large scale painting showed a street theatre presentation
comprised mostly of young children, whose sorrowful looks conveyed obvious
exploitation. In my essay on my blog on the Impressionist show at the MFA from
the the mid 90’s I quoted Michael Baxandall, who felt that the work of Chardin
drew its strength from the way it understood that the structuring of the visual
reality had its roots in the eye/mind and its language of chiaroscuro. http://martinmugar.blogspot.com/2011/11/modern-arts-considered-this-article-for.html
This notion becomes reified in the hands of the artist of
the late 19thc where the balance between seer and seen is lost. The paintings
are too much about the sad-eyed urchins and not the event of seeing them. The
limpidity for example of the work of Caravaggio is achieved by its
hypersensitivity to how the eye organizes the visual world. Subtle distinctions
between the seer and the seen (scene) are the sine qua non of great art.
In the 20thc, this balancing of that distinction is most
evident in the work of the Abstract Expressionists. The evanescence of Rothko’s
late work appears as an optical apparition. It partakes of the reductionist
chromatic trope supported by Greenberg’s philosophy but stays rooted in the
language of seeing in its use of subtly juxtaposed warms and cools. It stays in
the Western Tradition of seeing that goes back to Vermeer and in fact his work
seems at times to be a detail of, say a pearl, on the necklace of the woman in
one of his most famous paintings, the so-called “Woman with a Pearl Earing”.
Rothko’s work has been seen as an example of Talmudic
mysticism. When it comes to respecting the namelessness of God it seems
Abstraction is a most authentic vehicle .It intrigues me as I hear myself use
seer and seen that it resonates with the words of mystics from the Upanishads.
Or the constant reference to the struggle to merge the observer and the
observed in the work of Krishnamurti evidenced by his constant frustration at finding
the right word for this conundrum.
There seems to be a relationship between the interest in how
the eye sees and mysticism .If the cognitive structure of the eye shapes
reality, then an exploration of this structure puts the artist on the edge of
knowing and unknowing. Is it any surprise that the artists, who walk this line, this razor’s edge are not the happiest people in the world? The comforting
sense that the world we move in is a seamless whole has not been granted to them.
A simple figure/ground exercise for Rothko becomes a meditation on Being and
Nothingness.
For the artist ,who pursues abstraction, the risk of
reification becomes enormous. There is the assumption that, of course, abstraction is not reality, so there is no risk but it can be as leaden as a
Bougereau. It seems that artists think they are given two choices, that they
think are incompatible: Either you have a unique vision or you are a follower. That you have to be both seems to escape them. If you are influenced, you really can’t be an artist. This seems to be the case of the winners of a
recent annual art show and competition comprised of New England Artists, in
which I was included. In its generosity to include as many artists as possible
it ran the gamut between sophistic and amateur. The art is divided into work
selected by an outside curator and the rest is included in a concurrent show
with another name. In the end there was not much difference in quality between
the two groups. For the most part the show is made up of Abstraction, that
wallows in a mix of expressionist mark making and a vague sense of pattern and Photorealist
work, both of which seemed to catch the eye of the outside curator. The abstract
artists who did not question or embrace their roots were among the winners
of the competition. It would have been refreshing to see some humble exploration
of the rich language of 20thc abstraction.
We are in a post-ideological era in art. Therefore, the
realism is not suported by the doctrines of a movement, as it did in the late Sixties
and the Abstraction does not have the austere words of Ad Reinhardt to push it toward purity. Maybe
that is a good thing. But the results are not encouraging for the future of
painting. In this show the work floats on its own merits, which are no longer
to seduce the viewer with its ideological purity, but to do so by the lowest
common denominator of emotionality in the case of abstraction or crass
facticity in the case of the realism. I suppose that this is a normal evolution
similar to that from the High Renaissance to the Mannerists in Italy, before
chiaroscuro regrounded painting in the Baroque. But in the case of the prizewinners, they show no intelligence in regards to their sources. Like little bubble boys
and girls they can’t absorb any influences. They suffer from terminal narcissism.
Maybe that is the Modern aesthetic. The current manifestation of reification.
I can think of two artists who are presently painting in the
Boston area, whose art radiates a gracious interest in the tradition of painting
.Jim Falck and Addison Parks.For them the Tradition is the period from the beginning
of the 20thc: the world of Matisse and Picasso, which could be summed up as the
pushing of paint, with the dynamics of color and figure ground, toward the
simplicity of the written word. Recently I witnessed the finished product of a
mural Jim was asked to do at the gallery at Montserrat College of Art. It was a
full-sized mural, that was constructed of abstracted figures woven together with
as much understanding of time and space as Picasso’s “Desmoiselles d’Avignon”. Figure
and ground give the figures a visual life that keeps the viewer’s eye
constantly moving. The colors bounce back and forth between warm and cool to
create a mood of sunlit Italy and the Mediterranean. This is not a blind use of
the tradition but a respect for how it can integrate the figure into the environment
to create one organic being, which is “Life”. Jim’s favorite word. All one had
to do was compare his mural to the other ones done on adjacent walls to know
how smart Jim is. The others used paint in a additive manner. One mark on top of the other with no
sense of integration.
Addison nourishes his work with the artists he loves, Hoffmann
and Marin, Hartley and Miro. Here is the love of painting as language, that
allows for buoyancy and joy, to permeate the work. The language paints the painting.
This guy lives art, thinks art. There is such an abundance of letting things
be, through the language of painting. Parks, who is a writer, knows how words live
as part of an organic whole. You never know how they will react, when they are
juxtaposed with each other.
In a culture where everything has its shelf life, I don’t
expect the art community to carry these artists on their shoulders through the
streets of Boston, as local heroes. I have been in Boston long enough to recall
the hushed tones with which a new local art hero is discussed, and remember that
in every case the work of these artists has reeked of emotionality. The art
dealers knew that was needed for it to jump off the shelf in the art supermarket.
None of these artists were capable of organic evolution. Their success made that lack of organic growth inevitable. For Falck and Parks,
their love of art as language gives their art a life of its own and because it is "Life" itself, it breathes and pulsates and continue to grow.
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