Franz Gertsch: Gagosian gallery, New York.In 1977, after the albums Horses and Radio Ethiopia but before Easter and Wave, Patti Smith came to Cologne to perform at the adventurous Galerie Veith Turske. Franz Gertsch was a forty-seven-year-old Photorealist painter then. Like many fans before and since, from avant-gardists to punk-rock teenagers, he had fallen in love with the magnetic butch-sylph portrait of Smith by Robert Mapplethorpe on the cover of Horses, and he came to the show to shoot his own pictures. He used a flash that annoyed the diva, and she crumpled crum·ple v. crum·pled, crum·pling, crum·ples v.tr. 1. To crush together or press into wrinkles; rumple. 2. To cause to collapse. v.intr. 1. a piece of paper and threw it at him--a storied moment captured in the painting Patti Smith 11, 1978, one of a series of five large canvases made between 1978 and 1979, all of which were at Gagosian. Skinny, equine, lank-haired, lithe, Gertsch's Smith squats to fiddle with her amp; leans forward into a tangle of microphones; grimaces gorgeously at the implied camera. She wears an oversize white T-shirt, a checked black vest, black boots, and sparkly spark·ly adj. spark·li·er, spark·li·est 1. a. Giving off tiny flashes of light; glittery: a dress with sparkly sequins. b. red leggings leg·ging n. 1. A leg covering usually extending from the ankle to the knee and often made of material such as leather or canvas, worn especially by soldiers and workers. 2. leggings a. . She looks like a hardcore Magdalene, a slumming empress; she out-Jaggers Jagger. No one who has ever sung along to "Pissing in a River" could help exulting in such images. But how do the paintings resonate now, some twenty-five years later? The Smith cycle was accompanied by the comparably sized Selbstbildnis (Self-Portrait), 1980, which positioned Gertsch, in button-down shirt and sport coat, as an onlooker--impresario, voyeur--vis-a-vis his own rendering of her performance, thus completing a composite "situation portrait" of European art-world hipness at the end of the '70s. In an adjoining gallery, meanwhile, hung three preternaturally pre·ter·nat·u·ral adj. 1. Out of or being beyond the normal course of nature; differing from the natural. 2. Surpassing the normal or usual; extraordinary: detailed large-scale woodcuts of landscapes from the late '80s and early '90s. Together, the two groups of works established a pair of axes along which to graph Gertsch's consistent interests over the course of the last quarter century. Moving between painting and printmaking printmaking Art form consisting of the production of images, usually on paper but occasionally on fabric, parchment, plastic, or other support, by various techniques of multiplication, under the direct supervision of or by the hand of the artist. (axis 1) and portraiture and landscape (axis 2), he has maintained an investment in the Photorealist image and its simultaneous citation and monumentalization of the photographic instant. At the same time, he has preserved a fascination with likenesses of particular people and specific locales that paradoxically serve to empty out or seal off such particularity in favor of shimmering and impeccable art surfaces, testaments to the power of the master's eye and hand. [ILLUSTRATION OMITTED] [ILLUSTRATION OMITTED] Such strategic emptying is, of course, the stock-in-trade of Photorealist painting, and such artist-model/subject-object relations are among the core preoccupations of painting in general. Thus the Smith scenes--which celebrate not only a named person and place, a moment in the past explicitly predicated on Smith's fame and consequent desirability, but also Gertsch's interaction with that fame, his implicit realization of that desire--were presented here as glam history painting, updates in the art-historical tradition of the "painting of modern life." Smith was Gertsch's Olympia, sneering at him but performing for him, presenting for the eager (but never satisfied) viewer a larger-than-life scene of sexy power and creative dynamism. The paired portraits of the singer's and the artist's younger selves became a cultural landscape, and this effect was underlined by their juxtaposition with the dappled dap·pled adj. Spotted; mottled. [Middle English, probably from Old Norse depill, spot, splash, diminutive of dapi, pool. forests and rippling waters of the woodcut woodcut Design printed from a plank of wood incised parallel to the vertical axis of the wood's grain. One of the oldest methods of making prints, it was used in China to decorate textiles from the 5th century. pastorals Ruschegg, 1988-89, Schwarzwasser I, 1990-91, and Pestwurz, 1993. Abstracted, embellished, pure, the green-shaded wood-land, blue-toned pool, and ocher-tinted leaves offered viewers a different kind of fairyland--not the irrecoverable chic of art-rock performance in 1977, but a time-less vision of hushed and perfect nature. It's in these juxtapositions that the awkwardness of looking at the "Patti Smith" series in 2004 arises. Gertsch could not have known, in 1979, that Smith would take a ten-year break from recording to raise her children with Fred "Sonic" Smith or that Gone Again (1996) would reestablish her niche stardom. He could not have promised that Photorealism photorealism, international art movement of the late 1960s and 70s that stressed the precise rendering of subject matter, often taken from actual photographs or painted with the aid of slides. would remain a compelling pursuit for him or anyone else. This work, in other words Adv. 1. in other words - otherwise stated; "in other words, we are broke" put differently , was not made to look like a scrapbook proving Gertsch's back-in-the-day participation in Smith's enduring avant street-cred or contextualizing his own evolution into a blue-chip artist who makes flawlessly beautiful, delightfully theorized, and formally consistent collectibles. Nevertheless, the combination of such factors meant that this show, with its retrospective bent, read rather like Gertsch's self-presentation as a male artist in the grand style--spinning a variation on the old nature/culture dyad dyad /dy·ad/ (di´ad) a double chromosome resulting from the halving of a tetrad. dy·ad n. 1. Two individuals or units regarded as a pair, such as a mother and a daughter. 2. , watching appraisingly from the corner as the muse exercises herself, fixing her temporal beauty in the amber of his authorship. The paintings Patti Smith I through V present a charismatic persona but add little to our understanding of that charisma--such "neutral" or quasi-photographic reportage is, of course, largely their point. But the pressure of time elapsed e·lapse intr.v. e·lapsed, e·laps·ing, e·laps·es To slip by; pass: Weeks elapsed before we could start renovating. n. since the pictures' moment of origin, the parting of ways in the careers of the two artists, and--most important--the grandiloquence gran·dil·o·quence n. Pompous or bombastic speech or expression. [From grandiloquent, from Latin grandiloquus : grandis, great + of Gertsch's painterliness itself combine to make his use of Smith's image feel subtly opportunistic after the fact. The famous Horses portrait helped to create Patti Smith's mystique; the Gertsch portraits serve to historicize his·tor·i·cize v. his·tor·i·cized, his·tor·i·ciz·ing, his·tor·i·ciz·es v.tr. To make or make appear historical. v.intr. To use historical details or materials. it. Perhaps the paintings' true but obscured subject is the persuasive, persistent zeitgeist-conscious aestheticism Aestheticism Late 19th-century European arts movement that centred on the doctrine that art exists for the sake of its beauty alone. It began in reaction to prevailing utilitarian social philosophies and to the perceived ugliness and philistinism of the industrial age. instituted by Robert Mapplethorpe's iconic photograph. Frances Richard is a New York-based critic and poet. |
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