Banned and determined: Scott Rothkopf on Gene Swenson.GENE SWENSON PACES ALONE ON FIFTY-THIRD Street carrying a blue question mark perched on a pole. He's picketing the Museum of Modem Art and the guards have orders not to let him in, although he curated an exhibition at the institution little more than a year earlier. In a short time--from the fall of 1966 to the spring of 1968--Swenson went from being one of New York's most influential critics to a bitter and paranoid outcast, prophesying the fall of Rome. "The art world is sitting on a time bomb of social revolution," he wrote in April 1968, and within a year it would explode in a torrent of political questions aimed at social and cultural institutions alike. Yet by that time this pioneering champion of Pop art and outspoken enemy of formalism would be dead at age thirty five. And before long, the art world would have all but forgotten the man fellow critic Gregory Battcock hailed as the "most controversial and talked about art writer of his generation." Gene Swenson was "brought up in a Kansas jerkwater jerk·wa·ter adj. Informal 1. Remote, small, and insignificant: a jerkwater town. 2. Contemptibly trivial: jerkwater notions. , not even on a trunk line," or at least that's how he put it. From Topeka he headed to college at Yale, where he studied art history and classics, and in 1959 he landed in graduate school at New York New York, state, United States New York, Middle Atlantic state of the United States. It is bordered by Vermont, Massachusetts, Connecticut, and the Atlantic Ocean (E), New Jersey and Pennsylvania (S), Lakes Erie and Ontario and the Canadian province of University's Institute of Fine Arts The Institute of Fine Arts, commonly called the IFA, is a graduate school of New York University and is one of the world’s leading graduate schools and research centers in art history, archaeology, and conservation. . The institute had just occupied the elegant Duke mansion on Fifth Avenue, and students of the time recall having the run of the place like kids left home alone. Duke House was populated by characters such as the eloquent German classics professor Peter H. von Blanckenhagen, whom Robert Rosenblum described as a "dapper Dapper lawyer’s clerk; swindled into believing himself perfect gambler. [Br. Lit.: The Alchemist] See : Dupery , wildly gay, hideously deformed hunchback hunchback, abnormal outward curvature of the spine in the thoracic region. It is also known as kyphosis and humpback, and in its severe form a noticeable hump is evident on the back. " surrounded by a coterie of admiring young men. Swenson was a favorite of the professor and for a time also his lover. Robert Goldwater, husband to the then little-known artist Louise Bourgeois, also exerted a strong intellectual influence on Swenson and the institute's few fledgling modernists, through his work on primitivism primitivism, in art, the style of works of self-trained artists who develop their talents in a fanciful and fresh manner, as in the paintings of Henri Rousseau and Grandma Moses. and twentieth-century art. Swenson's colleag ues remember him as at first "overwrought o·ver·wrought adj. 1. Excessively nervous or excited; agitated. 2. Extremely elaborate or ornate; overdone: overwrought prose style. " and high-strung, anxiously stuttering stuttering or stammering, speech disorder marked by hesitation and inability to enunciate consonants without spasmodic repetition. Known technically as dysphemia, it has sometimes been attributed to an underlying personality disorder. through seminar reports. But beneath his nervous, bespectacled exterior classmate Lucy Lippard recognized an "unashamed un·a·shamed adj. Feeling or showing no remorse, shame, or embarrassment: un a·sham intensity and tremendous earnestness" combined "with an acute and restless intellect." He never completed his graduate degree but instead dived headlong into the studios and galleries of New York's most challenging young artists. With a flair for politics and a midwesterner's intuitive grasp of the American vernacular, Swenson immediately latched onto an emerging art of cars, cans, and comics, soon to be labeled Pop. From 1961 to 1965, he served as an editorial associate of Art News, for which he penned incisive early reviews on Robert Indiana, Andy Warhol, and Tom Wesselmann, among others. But of all the budding Pop artists, Swenson's first and most enduring love was James Rosenquist. He visited the artist's Coenties Slip studio in 1961 and described his life-changing collision with the paintings there as one of bewilderment and "painful confusion," later writing, "they temporarily had defeated me, my training and my esthetic philosophy." The young critic channeled this gut-wrenching reaction into his 1962 review of Rosenquist's first solo show: "The viewer's experience is ... a sense of violence at seeing fragments of a billboard environment in actual, full-size proportions; we are not permitted distance with its numbing illusion of escape. The elements of this impersonal Brobdingnagian world are pieced together with a ruthless clarity; it is profoundly disturbing and negative." Such a deeply felt response would become a hallmark of Swenson's criticism, which at its best betrayed his acute sensitivity to the emotional risks of the aesthetic encounter. In September 1962, at the age of twenty-eight, Swenson published the first major synthetic appreciation of American Pop art. Though his stab at a group epithet ep·i·thet n. 1. a. A term used to characterize a person or thing, such as rosy-fingered in rosy-fingered dawn or the Great in Catherine the Great. b. , "The New American 'Sign Painters,"' sounded a bit like the name of a spruced-up trade union, the eponymous article established key connections among works by Roy Lichtenstein, Jim Dine, Indiana, Warhol, and Rosenquist, as well as Stephen Durkee and Richard Smith. Swenson was not the first to link many of these artists in print, a distinction belonging to Max Kozloff in his unsympathetic Art International article "'Pop' Culture, Metaphysical Disgust, and the New Vulgarians," a diatribe di·a·tribe n. A bitter, abusive denunciation. [Latin diatriba, learned discourse, from Greek diatrib that called their work "sinister" and lamented the invasion of galleries by "the pinheaded and contemptible con·tempt·i·ble adj. 1. Deserving of contempt; despicable. 2. Obsolete Contemptuous. con·tempt style of gum chewers, bobby soxers, and worse, delinquents." Swenson himself almost seemed to concur, writing, "There is something impudent im·pu·dent adj. 1. Characterized by offensive boldness; insolent or impertinent. See Synonyms at shameless. 2. Obsolete Immodest. in these works, something so simple-minded and obvious as to be unexpected." Yet his great critical insight was to recognize the "impudent" and "simple-minded" as potentially interesting aesthetic qualities. He concluded approvingly, "The seven young painters described here revitalize our sense of the contemporary world. They point quite coolly to things close at hand with surprising and usually delightful results." Swenson's trailblazing trail·blaz·ing adj. Suggestive of one that blazes a trail; setting out in a promising new direction; pioneering or innovative: trailblazing research; a trailblazing new technique. advocacy of Pop inspired much of his finest writing and quickly earned him prominence on the New York art scene. Shrewdly articulating Pop's affective qualities and its high-keyed response to a roiling American culture, Swenson became a quasi spokesperson for the "movement," going so far as to write signed copy for the announcement of Warhol's historic Brillobox show at Stable Gallery. With a pithy pith·y adj. pith·i·er, pith·i·est 1. Precisely meaningful; forceful and brief: a pithy comment. 2. Consisting of or resembling pith. turn of phrase, he often cut to the heart of an artist's work, as he did when describing Lichtenstein's painting as an "exposure of visual as well as social habits." As writing on Pop ballooned, Swenson took it upon himself to clear the increasingly muddy critical waters by publishing interviews with the artists themselves in 1963 and 1964. In this pair of landmark articles titled "What Is Pop Art?" Swenson gave Warhol, Dine, Wesselmann, Lichtenstein, and others a chance to speak directly about their art. His interview style ranged from straightforward and earnest ("Why did you start painting soup cans?") to oblique and provocative ("Is Pop esthetic suicide?"). The answers he recorded still form the basis for many discussions of the respondents' work and include such now famous declarations as Warhol's desire to "be a machine" and Johns's insistent objection "I'm not a Pop artist!" Perhaps more important, Swenson's articles helped pave the way for a contemporary resurgence in interviews and writings by artists at a time when they were often seen but not heard. Because Swenson's critical success depended so heavily on Pop's rising star, his eminence threatened to fade as newer art cut short the movement's fifteen minutes of fame. By 1965 Pop faced mounting opposition from a pair of ascendant trends: the emergence of Minimalism minimalism, schools of contemporary art and music, with their origins in the 1960s, that have emphasized simplicity and objectivity. Minimalism in the Visual Arts and the renewed vigor of modernist painting. Although these two developments were in many ways ideologically opposed, Swenson saw them as twin "formalist" enemies furthering the cause of abstraction at the expense of Pop's hard-won figurative license. Even worse, the writing that spurred their advance--whether the laconic la·con·ic adj. Using or marked by the use of few words; terse or concise. See Synonyms at silent. [Latin Lac facticity fac·tic·i·ty n. The quality or condition of being a fact: historical facticity. of Donald Judd or the academic chic of Michael Fried--was anathema to Swenson's delicately wrought metaphor and stirring folksy folk·sy adj. folk·si·er, folk·si·est Informal 1. Simple and unpretentious in behavior. 2. Characterized by informality and affability: a friendly, folksy town. 3. sentiment. To fight back, he launched a dramatic counteroffensive coun·ter·of·fen·sive n. A large-scale counterattack by an armed force, intended to stop an enemy offensive. Noun 1. counteroffensive with "The Other Tradition," an exhibition at the Philadelphia Institute of Contemporary Art. This groundbreaking show proposed nothing less than an alternative, "non-formal" history of twentieth-century art, tracing a lineag e that went not from Cubism's flattened picture plane to Color Field painting but from Dada and Surrealism to Pop. "The Other Tradition" opened in January 1966, and word of the exhibition reached New York primarily through a slim black paperback catalogue that had the air of an illicit, seditious se·di·tious adj. 1. Of, relating to, or having the nature of sedition. 2. Given to or guilty of engaging in or promoting sedition. See Synonyms at insubordinate. pamphlet. Art critic Peter Schjeldahl, who knew Swenson at the time, remembered the book as "radioactive material radioactive material Radiation A substance that contains unstable–radioactive–atoms that give off radiation as they decay. See Radioactive decay. ," and even artists not included in the exhibition, such as Eva Hesse, were taken with its subversive views. According to the text, Swenson's aims were: "I) seeing certain twentieth-century works of art which have been overlooked or neglected by art historians, and 2) suggesting alternative 'intellectual' rather than formal ways of dealing with those works." To make good on his first goal Swenson assembled an idiosyncratic id·i·o·syn·cra·sy n. pl. id·i·o·syn·cra·sies 1. A structural or behavioral characteristic peculiar to an individual or group. 2. A physiological or temperamental peculiarity. 3. checklist comprising primarily Dada, Surrealism, Pop, and their descendants while eschewing iconic works of "high modernism" (Duchamp's contributions numbered four, Magritte's and Miro's three each, whereas Picasso scored only one offbeat painting, and Cezanne, Mondrian, and Kandinsky didn't even ma ke the cut). As for his second objective, Swenson angrily rallied his readers against formalism's biases with the preachy preach·y adj. preach·i·er, preach·i·est Inclined or given to tedious and excessive moralizing; didactic. preach rhetoric of a political rabble-rouser: "How much longer will we rest content with our defective and infectious critical tools and our academic standards? How many more times can we see the words 'picture plane,' 'modernism,' 'crisis,' 'new,' and 'literary' without flushing?" Today Swenson's gamble on a Surrealist-based art history might not seem particularly courageous, but in the early to mid-'60s the movement suffered from a bad reputation in good criticism. Hard-core formalists treated it primarily as a "literary" curiosity or an eccentric sideshow See Windows SideShow. to the history of modernism (Greenberg, for example, claimed it merely added new "anecdotes" to the visual arts). For a writer such as Swenson, however, Surrealism's "literary" bent--its preoccupation with subject matter apart from painting itself--was its chief appeal. Still, he knew better than to attempt a wholesale revival of the movement, especially given the recent exhaustion of Abstract Expressionism's putative soul-searching. Swenson instead proposed a sophisticated reappraisal of Surrealism through the cool lens of Pop. He downplayed the Surrealists' focus on the unconscious of the individual artist while emphasizing their fascination with the rich emotional and psychological responses triggered by everyday objects--whethe r found or realistically rendered. For Swenson, such objects, plainly presented-in the form of Dada readymades, Magrittean dream pictures, or Pop commodities--could prick the viewer's emotions or sexual appetites without raising the then taboo issue of an artist's narcissistic introspection. Swenson concluded his show with a mix of edgy Surrealism-tinged work by several of his young artist friends. He was particularly taken with the fetishism fetishism, in psychiatry, a paraphilia (see perversion, sexual) in which erotic interest and satisfaction are centered on an inanimate object or a specific, nongenital part of the anatomy. Generally occurring in males, fetishism frequently centers on a garment (e.g. of Paul Thek's Plexiglas-encased hunks hunks pl.n. (used with a sing. verb) A disagreeable and often miserly person. [Origin unknown.] of wax flesh and Joe Raffaele's paintings of collaged, often erotic magazine photography. In their work Swenson recognized a potent "post-Freudian" cocktail of Pop and Surrealism that made them perfect heirs to "The Other Tradition." But apart from their neat fit with his thesis, Swenson's willingness to promote their art in his show and in his writing was particularly daring given their frank use of homoerotic ho·mo·e·rot·ic adj. 1. Of or concerning homosexual love and desire. 2. Tending to arouse such desire. Adj. 1. and sadomasochistic sa·do·mas·o·chism n. The combination of sadism and masochism, in particular the deriving of pleasure, especially sexual gratification, from inflicting or submitting to physical or emotional abuse. imagery. At a time when naked bodies in art were nearly all of the fairer sex, Raffaele's full-frontal pic of a muscle man and Thek's encaustic encaustic, painting medium in which the binder for the pigment is wax or wax and resin. Examples of encaustic tomb portraits from Roman Egypt bear witness to the durability of the medium, which is thought to have been widely used in ancient times. self-portrait with pierced tongue stood out from the crowd of Great American Nudes. Swenson's biography plays a part here, since his own taste for S&M was apparently not limited to art, and he ran with a predominantly gay crowd that included writers a nd artists Peter Hujar, Thek, and Raffaele, as well as his good friend Ann Wilson. Ultimately, though, his great white hopes for a "non-formal" future foundered in an art world that was obsessed ob·sess v. ob·sessed, ob·sess·ing, ob·sess·es v.tr. To preoccupy the mind of excessively. v.intr. with pictorial invention and that preferred not to mix paint and personal politics. Lucy Lippard confirmed as much in her Art International review of "The Other Tradition." There she praised the show for sending off "vital sparks of perception" and expanding "the rapidly shrinking scope of criticism" but dismissed Swenson's fresh picks as "warmed over" Surrealism. Lippard adapted his renewed interest in sex to suit a more formally palatable art she called Eccentric Abstraction. Following "The Other Tradition," Swenson embarked on a prolific series of articles and a second exhibition, making 1966 the most productive year of his career. He served as the first New York editor of the London-based magazine Art and Artists, launched in April by Mario Amaya (a friend of Swenson's most likely remembered today for taking a bullet in the hip during Valerie Solanas's modest shooting spree at Warhol's Factory). Like Swenson's, Amaya's taste exceeded the limited formalist palate, and his magazine provided a temporary haven for Swenson's musings, which culminated abruptly in issue five with "Heroic Immolationl," a strangely censorious cen·so·ri·ous adj. 1. Tending to censure; highly critical. 2. Expressing censure. [Latin c account of Ingres. In the meantime Adv. 1. in the meantime - during the intervening time; "meanwhile I will not think about the problem"; "meantime he was attentive to his other interests"; "in the meantime the police were notified" meantime, meanwhile , Swenson kept busy publishing interviews with Raffaele, Thek, and Mike Todd (another of his young "post-Freudian" fetishists). In these conversations he gave free reign to the erotically charged subtext of "The Other Tradition" by bombarding Bombarding is the process of 'pumping' a Cold Cathode Lighting tube (otherwise called Neon Signs). Information A detailed process of bombarding can be found here, Bombarding. his interviewees with such racy questions as "Are your works sadomasochistic?" If 1966 marked the height of Swenson's career, the year also witnessed the start of his precipitous slide into mental illness and eventual art-world ostracism ostracism (ŏs`trəsĭz'əm), ancient Athenian method of banishing a public figure. It was introduced after the fall of the family of Pisistratus. . In November the Museum of Modern Art presented his exhibition "Art in the Mirror," a deeply personal selection of twentieth-century artworks that, according to Swenson's brochure, "direct questions, insults and homages" to art itself. With works such as Duchamp's LHOOQ, Lichtenstein's Brushstroke, and Rauschenberg's Erased de Kooning Drawing, Swenson put a reverse spin on the formalist call for an artwork's reflexivity while pointedly rejecting any art "whose subject is 'pure' paint or color or line." Forward-thinking for its time, the show hit bumps in the planning stages when Swenson suffered a debilitating de·bil·i·tat·ing adj. Causing a loss of strength or energy. Debilitating Weakening, or reducing the strength of. Mentioned in: Stress Reduction attack of appendicitis Appendicitis Definition Appendicitis is an inflammation of the appendix, which is the worm-shaped pouch attached to the cecum, the beginning of the large intestine. The appendix has no known function in the body, but it can become diseased. . The accompanying brochure was only a shadow of the essay he had envisioned, and his work on another MOMA Moma (mō`mä), town, E central Mozambique. It is important mainly as a harbor for the export of tropical produce. catalogue further strained his relations with museum brass, who had reportedly been considering him for a permanent c uratorial position. The job never panned out, nor, according to art writer Henry Martin, did a number of grant applications and publication projects. These professional disappointments made Swenson deeply resentful, and he stopped publishing magazine criticism in 1967, just as the art he backed sank farther from the limelight. Peter Schjeldahl remarked, "The resentment that he felt about not being understood and accepted was the resentment of an unrequited lover.... In those early moments, he really did have a gift to give, but when it wasn't taken the way he wanted, he got upset, and then he jumped the tracks." Swenson himself explained the situation in a letter to Lichtenstein: "My experience in the art world has been heartbreaking and embittering--that is why I had to decide, absolutely, to leave." With his career on the rocks, Swenson was further shaken by his increasingly unstable mental health. Over the next two years he spent time in Bellevue and suffered from bouts of schizophrenia and severe paranoid delusions, which led him to regard a number of art-world figures with contempt at best and malice at worst. Henry Geldzahler, a precocious curator at the Metropolitan Museum and art-world gadfly gadfly, name for various biting flies, especially those that attack livestock, e.g., the botfly and the horsefly. , particularly piqued his jealous ire. Swenson notoriously sent the museum a funeral wreath bearing the name "Henry" and challenged the curator to a $10,000 riddle, but Geldzahler didn't take the bait. On another occasion, Rosenquist remembers Swenson loitering Loitering (IPA pronunciation: ['lɔɪtəˌrɪŋ] is an intransitive verb meaning to stand idly, to stop numerous times, or to delay and procrastinate. outside a party thrown for Rosenquist at Rauschenberg's studio by collectors Ethel and Robert Scull. Once invited inside, Swenson eyed a huge temporary chandelier and asked how many people it would crush if its ropes were cur cur a derogatory term for a mongrel dog. ; the alarmed hosts had him tailed all night in case he tried to find out. By this point, according to his friend Bill Wilson, "Ge ne had assumed the pathos of the creative person whose madness has ceased to be funny." Petty jealousies and professional disappointments aside, Swenson's beef with the art world became increasingly motivated by an all-consuming moral and political zeal. As America plunged deeper into racial strife and Vietnam he was dismayed that his fellow writers and artists were unwilling to join him on the barricades. Although he had abandoned the insular debates of the art magazines, in the spring of 1968 he published four pieces in the liberal tabloid New York Free Press, newspaper home to Abbie Hoffman and Elridge Cleaver. In articles such as "The Corporate Structure of the American Art World" and "Why Have None of My Fellow Artists Spoken a Word in Behalf of the Revolution?," Swenson decried the funding of museums by "the economic dictatorship" and scoffed at handouts from "'enlightened' despots" while suggesting a guaranteed annual wage for artists. Taking aim at his colleagues' political complacency, he wrote, "We of the art world have been wearing our responsibilities too lightly these days. This fri volity will live in the pages of history as The Shame of the Artists." Privately Swenson gave Rosenquist the silent treatment for allowing his work to "serve the government" at the Sao Paulo Bienal, and publicly he accused his old friend of taking the "ostrich position." In a particularly vicious swipe, he branded fellow critic Barbara Rose "our Marie Antoinette, with all that implies." Swenson supplemented his political writing with acts of public protest, including a fiery speech outside the Leo Castelli gallery, and he was arrested twice, which gave him great pride. In February 1968 he began his daily picketing of MOMA, carrying his blue question mark. Apparently out of fear that he might damage the art, museum officials banned his entrance. Swenson staged his last and most poignant act of defiance against the museum on the occasion of William Rubin's exhibition "Dada, Surrealism, and Their Heritage," MOMA's first comprehensive look at the movements since 1936. Rather than applaud his beloved Surrealism's ascent into the ivory tower, Swenson railed against the museum alongside other critics, such as Nicolas Calas, who lamented the art's 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. at the hands of a formalist curator more concerned with his subject's stylistic taxonomy than its seditious sex appeal. Swenson took out unsigned ads in the Village Voice "dedicated to the lost but not forgotten spirit of Dada and Surre alism" and invited readers to "join Les Enfants du Parody" outside the "Mausoleum Of Modem Art" on the night of the exhibition's private preview. Nearly three hundred sloganeering slo·gan·eer n. A person who invents or uses slogans. intr.v. slo·gan·eered, slo·gan·eer·ing, slo·gan·eers To invent or use slogans. Noun 1. demonstrators heeded the call to arms and gathered at MOMA's entrance, which was guarded by crash-helmeted members of New York's Tactical Patrol Force. On hand for the opening, Salvador Dali wryly quipped to the New York Times, "I'm very proud of the hippies.... But, unfortunately, many of the young people today have no information. Dada was a protest against the bourgeoisie, yes--but by the aristocracy, not by the man in the street." So much for radical idealism. Paradoxically, Swenson's art criticism and politics were quintessentially of their time and yet beyond it. His adult life neatly spanned the '60s, and he was all too perfectly typecast to play the brilliant but sensitive victim of that brilliant but brutal decade--right down to the tragic 1969 car crash that killed him and his mother on his native Kansas soil. Like a biblical prophet, Swenson suffered greatly for the almost childlike sincerity with which he supported his often unpopular causes, many of which became gospel shortly after his demise. Only months before his death, Swenson addressed the inaugural meeting of the Art Workers Coalition, an organization that would soon pursue nearly every aspect of his political agenda, from protesting Vietnam to publicly demanding artists' fair financial compensation. The AWC (Association for Women in Computing, San Francisco, CA, www.awc-hq.org) A membership organization, founded in 1978, dedicated to the advancement of women in computing. It publishes newsletters, hosts seminars and annual conferences and recognizes distinguished women in the field with its would also take up the questions he lobbed at MOMA and the Met, as would a generation of artists and critics who ironically made "institutional critique" a new art-world currency. His critical r ecord, too, remains strong. Pop proved its staying power; art's concern with sexuality and psychology endures; and the hegemony of formalism has definitively crumbled. In recent years even MOMA, Swenson's Evil Empire, has reshuffled the formalist arrangement of its permanent collection and hung works from storage that would have looked at home in "The Other Tradition." Swenson would surely have seen this twist of fate as a mixed blessing, part vindication and part domestication domestication Process of hereditary reorganization of wild animals and plants into forms more accommodating to the interests of people. In its strictest sense, it refers to the initial stage of human mastery of wild animals and plants. of his revolutionary ideals. Scott Rothkopf is a Cambridge, Massachusetts-based critic. (See Contributors.) SCOTT ROTHKOPF is an art historian based in Cambridge, Massachusetts. Curator of the first comprehensive survey of Mel Bochner's late-'60s photographs, on view at the Arthur M. Sackler Arthur M. Sackler (August 22, 1913, Brooklyn, New York – May 26, 1987, New York City) was an American physician, entrepreneur and philanthropist. He attended New York University School of Medicine and graduated with an M.D. Museum at Harvard University through June 16, Rothkopf is completing a book on young artists and critics involved with Surrealism in America in the '60s, forthcoming from Yale University Press. This month Rothkopf discusses the contentious career and early death of critic Gene Swenson, one of Pop art's first champions. PHOTO: MICHAEL WANG |
|
||||||||||||||||||||

a·sham
Printer friendly
Cite/link
Email
Feedback
Reader Opinion