Stella Zambezi series |
Robert Linsley's New Abstraction has an interesting
blog post on the notion of symmetry, that got me thinking about several of the
artists that he mentioned, as well as an earlier blog on Stella, who is his “main man” in Modern painting. This is what
I wrote on his blog:
“I was thinking lately about
Richter in terms of the timelessness of his work. By that I don’t mean the
timelessness that would be used to describe the Neo-Platonic art of the Early
Renaissance but rather a lack of time. Haacke’s closed system has a sort of
circular time. It is as you say a closed system that keeps repeating two
different states of being. Similar to
Stella’s “Zambezi” that you commented on
in another post that to my eye draws the eye in and out in a constant
repetition. Richter’s painting is just one event that cannot circle back like
Stella’s and although his works literally “hold up”, they risk and do at times
descend into pure materiality. This embrace of the material results in what I
would call art that is “time poor” to transpose a Heideggerian notion of “world
poor”. This applies to the work of someone who appears to be a Richter
neophyte, Dan Colen at Gagosian. I wrote about Richter and Stella on the
occasion of last winter’s show of my work with Pollaro in Boston, where I talk
about the materiality of Richter but this notion of time is new and I think relevant to the understanding of
his work.”Richter |
It appears that Richter wants to
stop time to impress one event on the viewer to such a degree that it eliminates
any consideration of what came before or after. Paul Pollaro referred to it as
a kind of neon blast. Gone is the role of the imagination, which might evoke
memory, or the role of symbols that could point to an inner structure of
consciousness that shapes the present. It is like a TGV passing by so quickly you cannot
even see it as a fixed entity. Serra’s charcoal drawings have that kind of
powerful presence. They capture a one/two punch in a heightened version of
push/pull.
Serra charcoal drawing |
“To seal becoming with the character
of being. That is the supreme 'Will to Power' “. This statement by Nietzsche
might be of help in sorting out what these modern artists are after. What it
means is the following: Will to impress emphatically the individual presence in
such a way that its power eliminates any other entity being part of the whole. In the end
there is the winner and the winner creates or pushes into the background or
rather completely out of site the loser.
It is such a twisting of the original meaning of being and becoming: The source of Being in the Greek world was “The one” that existed beyond this world and in a strange way was the origin of this world. But it was hidden from the world and not of easy access. The world we live in is a world of becoming, of beings (small b) coming into existence and passing out of it. It is therefore a world of life but also of the decay of that life. In the NeoPlatonic work of the Renaissance mystics like Ficino referred to this world as the sub-lunar world which the individual had no control over. Individuals were subject to the blind laws of the stars and pulled by the moon toward death.
Some of the great works of art such as the "Birth of Venus" by Botticelli were created as magical talismans to give the patrons such as the Medici’s power over such maladies as melancholia. According to the astrological notions of the time melancholy was influenced by Saturn and the only antidote to it was to channel the goddess Venus. The goal was to get beyond (transcend) this sub-lunar world by accessing the divine powers.
It is such a twisting of the original meaning of being and becoming: The source of Being in the Greek world was “The one” that existed beyond this world and in a strange way was the origin of this world. But it was hidden from the world and not of easy access. The world we live in is a world of becoming, of beings (small b) coming into existence and passing out of it. It is therefore a world of life but also of the decay of that life. In the NeoPlatonic work of the Renaissance mystics like Ficino referred to this world as the sub-lunar world which the individual had no control over. Individuals were subject to the blind laws of the stars and pulled by the moon toward death.
Botticelli's "Birth of Venus" |
Some of the great works of art such as the "Birth of Venus" by Botticelli were created as magical talismans to give the patrons such as the Medici’s power over such maladies as melancholia. According to the astrological notions of the time melancholy was influenced by Saturn and the only antidote to it was to channel the goddess Venus. The goal was to get beyond (transcend) this sub-lunar world by accessing the divine powers.
Piero della Francesca |
This transcendence was not
achieved through an act of will but by knowing the right prayers or alchemical
formulas or in the case of art to use the right proportions, colors and
geometrical shapes. In short, a kind of knowing to achieve harmony. How
different from Nietzsche’s formula, which opens the door to limitless assertion of
power. It is not a statement that encourages relationships and harmonies but
aggressive stopping of any alternative except that which is imposed by the
“Will to Power”.
Al Held |
de Kooning |
Self-assertion in the work of early Al Held pushes stuff into the background. This is also true in a lot of de Kooning’s work. At least there is a relationship in that on the canvas the oppressed shapes are still seen. Late de Kooning enters a realm of pure movement. Richter shows nothing eliminated. There is just this eternal present of pure movement.
Late de Kooning |
But the risk or rather the goal is that the assertion of will is not enough to hold up the material that is used to make the painting. This is the case of the work of Dan Colen. I had a good laugh when it was pointed out to me by Paul Pollaro that this artist works in bubble gum and tar. My work has been described as looking like it was painted with bubblegum and Pollaro’s work is made with tar: One artist working with the materials that we use separately.
Dan Colen(tar and feather) |
There is no event in Colen, just the
characteristics of the materials of tar and feather or
the bubble gum that was harvested from public spaces in the city. All sprinkled with irony. Nietzsche
would see this as a weakness of the will.There is not enough self-assertion
to impress the self on becoming. But I would counter that this is a perverse
sort of self-assertion like a child throwing a temper tantrum or getting
attention by flinging its turds at its parents.*
* see: "The Impossibility of Transcendence in American Art"
* see my review of Stella at the Whitney
I can be followed on twitter @mugar49
* see: "The Impossibility of Transcendence in American Art"
* see my review of Stella at the Whitney
I can be followed on twitter @mugar49