Traipsing Through The
Arts-All Serious 20th Century Art Is About Sex-Forget That Stuff You
Learned In Art Class About The Search For The Sublime- Colorist Grady Lamont’s
117th Dream (Sex Dream, Oops, Erotic Dream) With His “Pinetops”
(1982) In Mind
By Laura Perkins
Sometimes these
assignments drive me crazy, not the art part or whatever Greg Green the site
manager, the guy who gives out the assignments gives me but the necessity for
disclaimers, the incessant replies to weirdoes who have plenty of time on their
hands and need some lonely hearts club partners and occasionally as here a
confession that I screwed up. I have just finished up what I thought was a very
nice assignment reviewing three books on art by the late novelist and essayist
John Updike (all with various aspects of “looking” in their titles which is
what Updike loved about viewing art over his long career). Most of the essays
originally breathed life in the pages of The
New York Review Of Books which I read on occasion (and my “ghost” advisor
here Sam Lowell reads religiously and has for years thus having some of his
critics in the old days before the twelve-step program sobered him up a bit
from those three to five day drunks claiming he “copied” half his sketches from
that source) or in some other art-friendly journal. It was a pleasant to read
them and to comment on them with my take on this whole series of mine about the
centrality of sex and eroticism of serious 20th century art in the
back of my mind when I compared his views to mine. No question whatever sexual
urges Updike charted among his suburban-angst driven mainly male characters in
his novels his approach to art, something he has been interested in since he
was a kid and may reflect that wide-eyed wonder that kids’ views bring to this
jaded old world, his view is probably from the well-worn school of the search
for the sublime that started maybe with Vasari, and his narrow-minded little
book come Renaissance visions and carried on up to the current day by the likes
of Bill Hazlitt and that holy goof and doped up junkie Johnny Raskin.
Frankly and here is
where the “confession” part comes in I overreached when I attempted to override
Updike’s views to fit my own theory. Tried to full-court press his small
observations on the sexual nature of modern art into a major theme. I knew I
was in troubled waters on this score when I, rightly, suggested that Edward
Hooper was a sexual pervert dressed in American realist clothing and tried to
buttonhole Updike into that belief which was forced, although an unforced error
on my part. That is the major error I will admit too. The other “sin” is that I
attempted to rush my whole theory over many works of art rather than as before
the Updike book series taking on one work of art at a time and see where that
fit in to my general scheme. Not every work of every serious 20th
century artist is driven by sex and sensuality (although I would suggest the
best work does but I refuse to overreach, again) For example, a most recent
example before I got caught up in the book review assignment Jackson Pollock’s
drip painting Number 31 from 1949 which is a classic case of sex-drive, no,
sex-obsessed painting which not only
buttressed my argument but had the added virtue of bringing to public attention
a little- known fact about the circumstances surrounding the production of that
masterpiece and others like it by Pollack if we can’t tar his comrades with the
same brush so to speak.
Not only did Jackson
Pollock have some kind of sex out in the shed in Long Island with who knows who
while he was doing that painting but some of his “love” drippings wound up on
the canvass giving me a double hit on my sex theories. I read somewhere, yes,
that drivel put out by Clement Greenberg when he was king of the hill of the
art world when it was centered by default in New York after World War II that
Pollack’s drips were his search for the divine, just another loose-leaf word
for, ah, sublime. Hell even Updike upchucked that drivel and showed that old
Jack was driven by Freudian-Jungian dreams, in short subconscious sex
stuff.
It
is possible to learn something both ways. Clearly I overreached in trying to
bring every possible artist Updike took aim at brushing the whole operation
with my own theory (although the charges of child sexual molestation against
Degas for his actions with those innocent ballerinas and other underage girls and
pandering for who knows what reason his lovely wife Camille against Monet have
held up very well as have Renoir’s latent homosexuality with his womanly
baby-faced bathing nudes). From here on in I will take one work of art at a
time and place it in context and if I get another book assignment will handle
it as a traditional review. That policy was easy to follow for an upcoming Marsden
Hartley look see with his rough trade homoerotic late sex paintings and Pollack
as it will be with my first new regime task whipping up a storm over Grady
Lamont who has made no bones that sex is what has driven his work and if not
that then sensuality. Grady has been quoted as saying that even painters like
Mark Rothko who one does not associate with being driven by sex as he has reeks,
his term not mine, of sex. Let see how things work out. Just don’t shoot the
messenger like a number of people have tried to do since I started this series
which I hope to continue for a while.
Now
to the inevitable disclaimers:
Apparently,
as fellow writer here Sam Lowell had warned me, doing the chores in the art
world, especially without the official imprimatur of the wicked art cabal, and
especially not bowing down to their totem artists and art works is as tough a
racket as doing film reviews. The few film reviews that I have done, as Sam or
Seth Garth the senior film reviewers here can witness, have created plenty of
blow-back in what I have now come to recognize is a dirty cutthroat business
with everyone in the profession living out some Hobbesian version of how to
survive. The evil eyes are always upon you in that not for the faint-hearted
profession for one little slip, one little too quirky remark and even more
venom will be thrown at you if you branch out like here to do other kinds of
cultural reviews. I know I received plenty of crazed messages from younger film
reviewers trying to make their mark in the world by leaving a bloody trail as
they move up what is called “the food chain” calling me a dilettante and worse
when I took on this series.
That
abuse from the cinematic crowd who after all are only as good as their
subjective opinions and can be construed as no better that your average
thoughtful movie-goer though is child’s play, kids’ stuff compared to the
vicious responses that I have received from so-called art critics in the short
time I have been running this project. (I won’t even mention the initial
blow-back from the troll religious evangelicals, the Brethren of the Common
Life from which I come, the religion of my youth the worst, who care nothing
for art, wouldn’t know an art work if they tripped over it but, quoting chapter
and verse from the Bible know that what I had to say about in my quirky remarks
about the relationship between sex and art were degenerate. Were and it still
perplexes me willing to call down fire and brimstone on me as Keil, the devil’s
servant.) Among the professional art critics and their press agents,
flak-catchers and strong arm hit men I have taken more than my share of abuse
for not being a member or the club, never claiming to be, and what amounts to my
being Nelly Telly the secular version of Keil, the devil’s servant that the
evangelicals kept accusing me of being as I moved along.
Those
barbs thrown at me not as an attack on my major theory that all serious 20th
century art is intimately tied to sex, sexuality and erotism but for what amount
to side observations about earlier works. I drew venomous hatred for pointing
out that John Singer Sargent’s infamous Madame X not only was a woman of easy
virtue to use a quaint old term but had a horrible bird-like nose that only a
mother could love causing her to refuse to do frontal portraits. Apparently if
that truth were known the price of her portrait would plummet in value causing
horrible shockwaves at the Metropolitan Museum in New York and maybe the
greater art world. (Since then known leftist
art critic Kenneth Rexford has come to my defense noting that what I had said
about Madame X’s motherless nose was absolutely correct and even Singer
Sargent’s earnest attempts to powder the beak cannot salvage that even though
the idea of beauty, professional beauty did not dwell on monstrous noses.) I gained
more crazed responses when I called things by their right name when I declared
the famous Isabella by John White
Alexander a stone-cold junkie (opium-crazed) growing the stuff out of a pot
where her dead lover’s severed head was being kept as part of the ritual of a
kinky cult started in ancient times and still around in secret hideouts today. (Rexford
left me high and dry on that one not “buying,” his term, my idea the fair
maiden was a junkie although conceding my point that she was a member of the
still growing cultists whose religion depended on severed heads.)
Almost naturally the
beast art critics went into crazed spasms when I mentioned the simple fact that
James Abbott McNeil Whistler, dear “Jimmy” who they tried to pawn off as a
devoted son on that so-called Mother painting was really a pimp, a procurer I
guess they called them in the 19th century. Why? For simply pointing
out that in his infamous The White Girl
now at the National Gallery which the collective cabal has deemed to be the
epitome of the struggle between innocence and the wicked world he was very
cleverly “advertising” his wares by putting a wolf’s head and fur beneath her
feet. That the classic “come hither” symbol in use since the times of the
courtesan Whole of Babylon and effectively used ever since then by the up-scale
crowd doing their nasty business on the sly with coded references unlike the
poor street whores and brothel damsels. They give dear “Jimmy” a pass since his
was hustling his mistress to make the rent money or to keep those repo wolves
from the door, the unfriendly door.
On “advice of counsel” I
stopped making reference to 19th century sex ploys and headed to the
20th century which has proven no better except that the evangelicals
have dropped away since they “know” all 20th century art, sexual or
not, is degenerate apparently taking
their cue from the SS boys around Hitler and Goebbels and would not let
their kids near a modern art museum. I won no friends when I pointed out that
lustful dirty old man Edward Hopper painting every young woman he could find
without her knowing it while going about in full awareness of her sex had
flunked facial drawing in art school or wherever he learned to draw. I
speculated that he had actually drawn one mopey male and one mopey female,
poorly, made many copies and when he had to paint people would attach, maybe by
glue or some other substance, those faces on his finished drawings. That one
rocked the whole Hopper merchandise empire and it was a close call whether I
would survive the onslaught once the cabal decided to send a strong man hit man
team out to try to intimidate me. Fortunately, the powers that be here
intervened and we settled the matter once they were assured I would not write
about Hopper again in that vein. Would only write that he did not glue each
mopey figure on by actually did each on the canvas even though to an untrained non-art
critic eye they all looked alike. More than that I cannot say.
Digging deeper into 20th
century art, the time of the big deal abstract impressionist uprising led by
guys like Jackson Pollock and Barney Newell proved no better although I won’t
bore the reader with the scandalous recent findings of human fluids on many of
his famous dripping works. That brings us to the recent barrage over my remarks
about Georgia O’Keeffe’s works. How not only her vaginal flowers reeked of sex
but that her New York sky-scrapers, Lake George farm houses and Southwest
mountains did as well. Yes, I know I am lucky to be around to tell the tale taking
on this super-iconic art figure.
I am glad that I let Sam
Lowell unwind, tell his take as far as it goes on what I have been up to in
this on-going hopefully quirky and what I think is a better word irreverent series
on self-selected art works that have grabbed my interest. That way my attack on
Art Today art critic Clarence Dewar
will make more sense. Mr. Dewar had taken me to task for not being a
professional art critic or having any entanglement with the cabal that runs the
art establishment, the official art academy in this country like they used to
have in Europe to run newcomer artists through the rules-driven gauntlet, the
mega-project driven art museum directors, the hungry to be monogram published
or mega-show essay writing art curators, the greedy little art collectors who
collect art like stock options, the hired gun press agents and flak-catchers
who protect every mega-show like it was the Oscars or something and worse, the
flitty hard as nails gallery owners trying to unload unsaleable inventory on a
naïve clientele.
More bothersome of late Mr.
Dewar has taken umbrage, his term, that my sense that all serious art, modern
art has sex or eroticism, sensuality if you prefer at its core. (That theory
shared by agreement with Sam who went after it hammer and tong in that
long-winded essay he wrote. (For Sam’s spiel see Archives dated February 20,
2019 Traipsing Through The Arts-All 20th
Century Art Is About Sex-Forget That Stuff You Learned In Art Class About The
Sublime-Abstract Expressionist Jackson Pollock Unchained- In The Midnight Hour
Gliding Through “Number 31” (1949) Without Wings-Sam Lowell Unchained)
Mr Dewar’s main
contention is rather than down and dirty sex and getting turned on something
greater, something more terrible and beyond compare is at stake. The search for
the sublime. Don’t laugh, please he is serious. All art and here we agree for
once that this is about modern art, post-Impressionist art when those bastards
went mano a mano with the camera view and decided to worry (fret according to
Degas) about giving impressions rather than exact detail which the camera would
win hands down is the search by humankind through its painter for something
greater than they could achieve. In the old days God but now art, art though as
a far remove from what you see in reality. In other words what is fake, what is
beyond expression.
Well I suppose to earn your
daily bread and to keep those gallery cocktail hour invitations arriving in the
mails that might be a tenable position in, maybe, 1750 but is far removed from
the more plebian concerns of the now diminishing number of artists who as we
entry into deep space Internet world consider what they do modern art, or even
post-modern art. Mr. Dewar made the fatal mistake though of selecting one Grady
Lamont as his candidate for the sublime, adding in that Lamont had reached
something like the epitome in his of disassociating line from form which had he
claimed preoccupied the modern artist at least since Cezanne (and I, we agree
that Cezanne is key to this concern although as an end not as a beginning since
he, Cezanne, was the last guy who gave a damn about capturing fruits and wine
on misshapen tables and wooden clapboards. Meaning he is last guy who you can
claim is a modern who did not care one way or the other about sex, about
sensuality, about eroticism (unless of course and I have never heard, and I
have asked Sam as well, that he was into some cult of erotic, exotic fruits and
such but one never knows.)
Even better that that
sublime gag, that sublime grift that has kept more art critics and curators
working that one would think humanly possible Mr. Dewar yawned at us is the old
chestnut about art for art’s sake that he claims Lamont is the first artist
since Whistler to proclaim as the real role of the artist. Lame gibberish.
First of all Whistler was much more interested in hustling his what did he call
them, oh yes, muses, the models he worked to death in the studio, in his bed
and when dough got short, chronically short as was the usual case out on the
misty foggy London streets. The art for art sake gag was an idea his press
agent Walter Middleton or maybe Bill Hazlitt though up to justify putting the
somber sullen symphonic works in the gallery windows. Why else would anybody
except his mother buy any of that downer painting when you could just go out
the door and get depressed for free. Even his mother thought he was being his
usual boorish self when he labeled her portrait a study in black and white or
gray. Jesus his poor bedazzled mother sat for him for hours and he “disrespected”
her that way.
But now on to Grady and
the real meaning of his work. Apparently Mr. Dewar did not bother to read the
very long article by the late art critic Tim Lewis in Mr. Dewar’s own
publication Art Today in 1983 when
the whole art world was in awe of Grady’s breakthrough painting Pinetops (1982) which made his nut (and
was recently sold in a private sale for eleven million dollars, the top price
for a real Lamont). In that article (strange Mr. Dewar didn’t see the article
since it preceded just in front of his then latest outpouring of the “search
for the sublime” in Chinese art of the 19th century) Lamont when
asked point blank by Tim Lewis what the painting had been about, what drove him
to express himself like that he answered candidly and I quote so there is no
misunderstanding “I wanted to pay homage to Georgia O’Keeffe’s pioneer work in
drawing the viewer to the similarities between certain opened flowers and the
vagina except I wanted to concentrate on the sexual act itself. The deep what
we could call holes in which the elongated poles sit are the consummate acts of
copulation. I think that is what draws the viewer to the painting, why it has
made an impression not seen since her times when she did true work and not that
crap out the desert or wherever she was hiding out.” Bingo.
As for Mr. Dewar’s idea
that Lamont had made a final breakthrough in what he asserted was high
symbolism over form he laughed (or at least that is how the transcript read)
and said it was more a question of his having a lot of silver paint, not a big
seller in the art supply stores left when he was short of money. On the art for
art’s sake argument he laughed and said essentially “what are you kidding, he
did the painting to earn his daily bread and maybe buy some other paints now
that the silver was getting low after he used so much for the Pinetop project. Case closed as Sam says
in his lawyer-like moments.
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