Printer Friendly
The Free Library
4,291,098 articles and books
Member login
User name  
Password 
 
Join us Forgot password?

"Cher Peintre, Lieber Maler, Dear Painter".


CENTRE GEORGES POMPIDOU, PARIS

"Cher

Cher, department, France

Cher (shĕr), department (1990 pop. 332,000), central France, in Berry. Chief cities are Vierzon and Bourges, the capital.

Cher, river, France

Cher, river, c.
 Peintre, Lieber Maler, Dear Painter" is the latest in a crop of international exhibitions devoted to the subject of painting. "Painting on the Move," the Kunstmuseum Basel's recent tour of the practice during the twentieth century, was the most exhaustive, starting with Cezanne and ending with young contemporary artists like Lucy McKenzie and Wilhelm Sasnal. The Walker Art Center's "Painting at the Edge of the World," 2001, and the Whitechapel London/MCA Chicago's "Examining Pictures," 1999, took the temperature of the present through a selective reappraisal of post-'60s painting. Whereas "Painting at the Edge of the World" argued for an ontological broadening of the medium to incorporate aspects of architecture, performance, sculpture, and photography, "Examining Pictures" raided the icebox of postwar painting to offer an admixture dedicated to the solipsistic pleasures of making and looking. Whether pointing the finger at Duchamp or digitization, Pollock or photography, all three shows addressed the f act that painting-however archaic, anachronistic, or critically short-circuited-refuses to lie down and die. Homing in on a particular strain of figurative painting, "Cher Peintre" narrows the scope of these investigations and poses a more specific question: Is it possible to conceive of figurative painting as a radical force in the aftermath of modernism and postmodernism? By grouping works of disparate quality and maturity, curators Alison M. Gingeras, of the Centre Georges Pompidou; Sabine Folie
folie à deux  (ah-ddbobr´) mental disorder affecting two persons who share the same delusions; formally classified as shared psychotic disorder .
folie du pourquoi  (doo-poor-kwah´) psychopathologic constant questioning.
, chief curator of the Kunsthalle Wien; and Blazenka Perica, of the Schirn Kunsthalle, Frankfurt, effectively, if unintentionally, provided an answer: sometimes, depending on who is doing it and in what context.

At the roots of the family tree of painting proposed in "Cher Peintre" are Picabia's female nudes of the early 1940s, which he extrapolated from images in risque French magazines. With their robust mix of kitsch kitsch [Ger.,=trash], term most frequently applied since the early 20th cent. to works considered pretentious and tasteless. Exploitative commercial objects such as Mona Lisa scarves and abominable plaster reproductions of sculptural masterpieces are described as kitsch, as are works that claim artistic value but are weak, cheap, or sentimental. A museum of kitsch was opened in Stuttgart. and academicism, these nudes are now generally considered radical rather than reactionary--a sarcastic riposte to the Nazi decimation of modern art (and thus related to Magritte Magritte - A constraint language for interactive graphical layout by J. Gosling. It solves constraints using algebraic transformations.

["Algebraic Constraints", J. Gosling, PhD Thesis, TR CS-83-132, CMU, May 1983].
's contemporaneous infatuation with Renoiresque erotica in occupied Belgium). The show's genealogy then continues with Bernard Buffet's attenuated figure studies from 1949 to the mid-'60s; Sigmar Polke's Capitalist Realism of the early '60s; Alex Katz's '70s conversation pieces; and Martin Kippenberger's 1981 series "Lieber Maler, male mir" (Dear painter, paint me), in which he delegated the act, but not the idea, of painting to a firm of commercial poster painters. His series inspired the title of "Cher Peintre" and its primary paradigm: for this is an exhibition in which figurative painting's critical potential emerges not fr om traditional qualities of direct observation and subjective expression but rather from probing style, source, technique, image, and metaphor. "Cher Peintre" is about painting thinking about painting: reflexive, self-conscious, aware of the medium's critical endgame but never despondent about its continued ability to create meaning or to seduce. Seen in these terms, Picabia, Polke, and Kippenberger, followed by contemporary artists John Currin, Glenn Brown, and Luc Tuymans, emerge as figures central not just to the exhibition, but increasingly to the history of postwar painting.

The show stumbles when it confuses truly innovative efforts with figurative art that merely lies outside the mainstream. It's difficult to subscribe to Gingeras's view, put forth in the catalogue, that the lamentable Buffet was an "antagonistic thorn in the side of European post-war art history." His existential kitsch may briefly have looked oppositional in the eyes of the post-Occupation abstractionist Ecole de Paris but thereafter could happily have hung on the railings of Montmartre Montmartre (môNmär`trə) [Fr.,=hill of the martyrs], hill in Paris, on the right bank of the Seine River. The highest point of Paris, it is topped by the famous Church of Sacré-Cœur. Parts of the ancient quarter on its slopes were long a favorite residence of the bohemian world. Until the 20th cent.: He's bad, but the wrong sort of bad. Outre figuration is better represented in the show by Alex Katz's not-so-shiny-happy people, but even here it seems more a case of retreat than of revolution, more Eric Rohmer than Jean-Luc Godard.

Among younger painters, the appeal of Elizabeth Peyton's ruby-lipped boys is wearing as thin as her pellucid pellucid /pel·lu·cid/ (pel-oo´sid) translucent.

pel·lu·cid (p-l
 paint--though, to be fair, it's hard for an oeuvre to mature when premised on adolescent fixation. If Peyton is suffering from overexposure, take note, Kurt Kauper, of your full-frontal, perma-tanned Cary Grants in the next room. Slick painting isn't enough--unless, of course, you're already a Picabia. The cartoonisty Brian Calvin (Alex Katz's heir apparent) and the breathlessly brushy London-based painter Sophie von Hellermann show that while it is relatively easy to forge an offbeat style, it's another thing to come up with one that is conceptually dense.

More demanding is the hermetic figuration of Germans Kai Althoff and Neo Rauch. With vague allusions to Prussia's military past and to esoteric religion, Althoff's hesitant, nervy works are as impenetrable as a meeting of the Freemasons. Neo Rauch's allegories dazzle visually but at times appear weighted down by their historical references--de Chirico, Constructivism constructivism, Russian art movement founded c.1913 by Vladimir Tatlin, related to the movement known as suprematism. After 1916 the brothers Naum Gabo and Antoine Pevsner gave new impetus to Tatlin's art of purely abstract (although politically intended) constructions. Their sculptural works derived from cubism and futurism, but had a more architectonic and machinelike emphasis related to the technology of the society in which they were created., socialist realism socialist realism, Soviet artistic and literary doctrine. The role of literature and art in Soviet society was redefined in 1932 when the newly created Union of Soviet Writers proclaimed socialist realism as compulsory literary practice. As conceived by Stalin, Zhdanov, and Gorky, socialist realism prescribed a generally optimistic picture of socialist reality and of the development of the Communist revolution. Its purpose was education in the spirit of socialism.. There's a fine line between repeating history and reformulating it to reach something original, and the difference is exemplified here by Brown and Currin, both of whom, despite the familiarity of much of their work in this show, look startlingly fresh. Their virtuosic techniques, married to a close understanding of the historical pleasures and powers, as well as the problems, of painting, enable them to draw fresh water from the reservoir. Like Tuymans, who is represented by the seminal cycle "Der diagnostische Blick" (The diagnostic view), 1992, in which human illness, so poignantly evoked by his anemic, fragile brushstrokes , stands as a metaphor for the malady of painting itself, Brown and Currin understand that painterly technique exists to mediate a psychological exchange or, better, a pair of exchanges, between painter and subject and between canvas and viewer, beginning with sight and ending with thought.

"Cher Peintre" is on view at Kunsthalle Wien through Jan. 1, 2003; travels to Schirn Kunsthalle, Frankfurt, Jan. 15-April 6, 2003.

Kate Bush is senior programmer at The Photographers' Gallery, London.
COPYRIGHT 2002 Artforum International Magazine, Inc.
No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
Copyright 2002, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

 Reader Opinion

Title:

Comment:



 

Article Details
Printer friendly Cite/link Email Feedback
Author:Bush, Kate
Publication:Artforum International
Geographic Code:4EUFR
Date:Oct 1, 2002
Words:953
Previous Article:"Matisse Picasso".
Next Article:Mike Kelley.
Topics:



Related Articles
Jean Le Gac. (exhibit at the Galerie Templon, Paris, France) (Review)
Getting Nanowired.(nanowires and semiconductor chips)
Notes and Asides.(Saul Bellow and Whittaker Chambers)(Column)
Damien De Lepeleire: La Lettre Volee. (Brussels).(Brief Article)
DOOMED SWISSAIR FLIGHT CARRIED PICASSO PAINTING.(News)
Travel Brief Preview.
Francis Picabia. (Preview).(retrospective exhibition)(Brief Article)
Travel brief preview.
Like a Sponge Thrown into Water: Francis Lieber's European Travel Journal of 1844-1845.(Book Review)
The Photoshop and Painter Artist Tablet Book.(Brief Article)(Book Review)

Terms of use | Copyright © 2008 Farlex, Inc. | Feedback | For webmasters | Submit articles