Adolph Gottlieb: Pace Wildenstein.A pictograph pictograph - pictogram is a kind of visual morpheme morpheme: see grammar. morpheme In linguistics, the smallest grammatical unit of speech. It may be an entire word (cat) or an element of a word (re- and -ed in reappeared). (like a hieroglyph hieroglyph Character in any of several systems of writing that is pictorial in nature, though not necessarily in the way it is read. The term was originally used for the oldest system of writing Ancient Egyptian (see Egyptian language). ), at once diagrammatic, imagistic, and "graphic." In the paintings of Adolph Gottlieb, pictographs range from geometric squiggles to letters to schematic body parts, each a sort of two-dimensional "poetic object" that he lines up like an object in a cabinet of curiosities For the 2002 novel by Douglas Preston and Lincoln Child, see The Cabinet of Curiosities Cabinets of curiosities (also known as Wunderkammer or wonder-rooms . There is a sense of controlled clutter, as the structure of the grid is used to impose a semblance of order on a chaos of emotions. The works are small, which adds to their intimate feel, and the forms are invariably in·var·i·a·ble adj. Not changing or subject to change; constant. in·var i·a·bil symbolic, although they also stand on their own as intriguing shapes. Some paintings are brushier than others: One can't help but wonder whether those made in the late '40s were influenced by art informale. They also have an increasingly graffiti-like look, suggesting the influence of Jean Dubuffet and art brut. [ILLUSTRATION OMITTED] While Gottlieb's first pictographic pic·to·graph n. In all senses also called pictogram. 1. A picture representing a word or idea; a hieroglyph. 2. A record in hieroglyphic symbols. 3. canvas, Eyes of Oedipus, 1941, really saw him come into his own, it seems clear that the body of work to which the painting belongs is essentially a Surrealist spinoff: Just look at Max Ernst's Oedipus Rex, 1922. It was standard Surrealist procedure to refer to Freud, and through Freud to Sophocles, and through Sophocles to primitive emotions, perverse relationships, and ancient myths. The really interesting thing about Gottlieb's rendering of Oedipus--he returned to the subject numerous times between 1941 and 1945--is that the artist concentrates on the mythical character's eyes. (Oedipus blinded himself when he finally "saw" who he was having sex with, his mother.) Eyes, seeing and unseeing, recur throughout Gottlieb's pictographs, in a variety of facial contexts. Three examples--Reflection, 1941, The Enchanted en·chant tr.v. en·chant·ed, en·chant·ing, en·chants 1. To cast a spell over; bewitch. 2. To attract and delight; entrance. See Synonyms at charm. Ones, 1945, and Vigil, 1948--pertain to problems of "seeing," including seeing "the light in the darkness" and seeing strange (i.e. modern) works of art. What is so important about Oedipus's eyes? From a psychoanalytic point of view, his self-blinding was a symbolic castration castration, removal of the sex glands of an animal, i.e., testes in the male, or ovaries and often the uterus in the female. Castration of the female animal is commonly referred to as spaying. . He punished himself for breaking the incest barrier even as he blinded himself for seeing what he couldn't believe he saw. The ancient Greeks had a fine-tuned sense of irony: Oedipus's insight is inseparable from his loss of vision. Gottlieb argues that artists--he in particular--are "seers." The artist sees things others can't and displays those things as visual riddles. The Surrealists specialized in enigmas, and Gottlieb was a latter-day authority. Just as the Surrealists made miragelike enigmas in what they experienced as the wasteland of the everyday world, their artistic descendents manufactured enigmas in the actual wasteland that the world became during the violence of World War II. Gottlieb's Oedipus is the symbol of a world's "descent into darkness" (as he put it in the title of a 1947 painting), the blindness of the mad artist-seer. |
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