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Telling tales.


On the occasion of the Modern Art Museum of Fort Worth's traveling retrospective "Philip Guston," Artforum asked art historian David Anfam to examine the career of a painter whose "untimely" return to storytelling pointed the way "back to the future."

LIKE MANY A GOOD STORY, Philip Guston's art starts in earnest with a bang. Although Bombardment, 1937-38, was not Guston's first work, it certainly marks his most significant point of departure. True, its overly "plastic" modeling recalls the monumentalizing Art Deco staginess stag·y also stag·ey  
adj. stag·i·er, stag·i·est
Having a theatrical, especially an artificial or affected, character or quality.



stag
 of umpteen WPA WPA: see Work Projects Administration.
WPA
 in full Works Progress Administration later (1939–43) Work Projects Administration

U.S. work program for the unemployed.
 murals long since faded into historical oblivion. But we also seem close to the freeze-frame action of comic strips. While this is perhaps Guston's Guernica, there remains another sense in which it resembles a Roy Lichtenstein combat scene of the early '60s--only an emblazoned "WHAAM!" is missing--time-warped back into the era of the Mexican muralists. Yet the past too haunts Bombardment, which, we might say, dynamites Michelangelo's Doni Tondo. So where are we? The answer lies in the labyrinths of time and space that belong to the storyteller's craft. The twists and turns of Guston's career--often he was either far ahead of, or else way behind, whatever "advanced" painters of the moment were doing, and sometimes both at once--read like the gambits of an artist who was forever going back to the future.

Of course, Guston's aesthetic conservatism was essential to his makeup. In the 19305 it led him to prefer Piero and his Renaissance cohorts over Picasso & Co., notwithstanding the various stage props and staffage borrowed from the latter. A key painting of the next decade, If This Be Not I, 1945, clings to a nostalgic style that meshes with the American romantic and magic-realist trends of the World War II years--the very juncture when, by comparison, Pollock had initiated the calligraphic maelstrom of There Were Seven in Eight, 1945, and Still's huge monolithic black field, 1944-N No. 2, was achieved. By the mid- to late 50s Guston's own color-field compositions had affinities with the careful messiness of second-generation gesturalism and its "Tenth Street touch" mannerisms even as Jasper Johns, Robert Rauschenberg, and others were undercutting "pure" painting--Greenbergian abstraction--with neo-Dada tactics. Late in his life, Guston's trailblazing revival of a brutish expressionist syntax likewise stood at loggerheads log·ger·head  
n.
1. A loggerhead turtle.

2. An iron tool consisting of a long handle with a bulbous end, used when heated to melt tar or warm liquids.

3.
 with Conceptualism's cool dematerialization For the phenomenon resembling teleportation, see, see .

In economics, dematerialization refers to the absolute or relative reduction in the quantity of materials required to serve economic functions in society. In common terms, dematerialization means doing more with less.
 of the art object altogether.

In the same vein, Rothko spoke for his colleagues in nominating Guston as his anti-type: "Philip, you are the best storyteller around, and I am the best organ player." That is, whereas Abstract Expressionism still aspired in true Romantic fashion to the ineffability in·ef·fa·ble  
adj.
1. Incapable of being expressed; indescribable or unutterable. See Synonyms at unspeakable.

2. Not to be uttered; taboo: the ineffable name of God.
 of music, Guston liked his texts. The consequences were appropriately double-edged. He tended to wax poetic when others sought the bold iconic stroke, and he resurrected lumpish graven grav·en  
v.
A past participle of grave3.

Adj. 1. graven - cut into a desired shape; "graven images"; "sculptured representations"
sculpted, sculptured
 images once talk--the increasingly Alexandrine alexandrine (ăl'ĭgzăn`drēn', –drīn'), in prosody, a line of 12 syllables (or 13 if the last syllable is unstressed). Its name probably derives from the fact that some poems of the 12th and 13th cent.  critical artspeak and Duchampian gambits that enveloped en·vel·op  
tr.v. en·vel·oped, en·vel·op·ing, en·vel·ops
1. To enclose or encase completely with or as if with a covering: "Accompanying the darkness, a stillness envelops the city" 
 the 19705--threatened to blunt the primacy of the image. Now that the tidy linear narratives of modernism and its march of stylistic "isms" are outmoded, it's hard not to sense the evergreen charm of a contrarian such as Guston. His wayward path testifies to the timeliness of being Nietzsche's "untimely" man. Wherever we want to pigeonhole pi·geon·hole  
n.
1. A small compartment or recess, as in a desk, for holding papers; a cubbyhole.

2. A specific, often oversimplified category.

3. The small hole or holes in a pigeon loft for nesting.

tr.
 Guston, he never quite fits.

Bombardment shows a world upended by war. Not a single figure displays eyes that can see. Here Guston reversed a theme that had already dominated his previous work, such as Conspirators CONSPIRATORS. Persons guilty of a conspiracy. See 3 Bl. Com. 126-71 Wils. Rep. 210-11. See Conspiracy. , 1930, where hooded Ku Klux Klansmen have plotted the lynching of a black man who is visible in the preparatory drawing but absent from the final design. At issue are the vulnerability of the self, the force of vision, and the problem of identity. Those who see but are themselves masked, like the Klansmen, have power over their unseeing victims (who again featured in Guston's mural The Struggle Against War and Fascism, 1934, executed in Morelia, Mexico, in collaboration with his painter friend Reuben Kadish). Throughout the rest of his career, Guston rang the variations on this fundamental equation. By the 19705 it reached an apotheosis in one of his favorite alter egos, the outsize out·size  
n.
1. An unusual size, especially a very large size.

2. A garment of unusual size.

adj. also out·sized
Unusually large, weighty, or extensive.
, goggle-eyed head.

Yet as the shocking impact of the World War II hit home, it became a commonplace to argue that the individual could no longer see his or her way through the tangle of a shattered reality. The more personal existence was in peril, the less humankind could be sure of its own nature. With the A-bomb's explosion, the potential for the obliteration

of self looked absolute. Against this apocalyptic background, Guston's work of the 194 05 unfolded. But it did so with characteristic sleight of hand sleight of hand
n. pl. sleights of hand
1. A trick or set of tricks performed by a juggler or magician so quickly and deftly that the manner of execution cannot be observed; legerdemain.

2.
.

The easiest interpretation of a nexus of paintings from 1941-48 that includes Martial Memory, 1941; If This Be Not 1 the two versions of Porch, 1946-47 and 1947, respectively; and The Tormentors, 1947-48-- each progressively more abstract treatments of figures engaged in mock battle or reduced to silent witnesses or victims--is as allegories pure and simple of the modern experience of warfare and Holocaust. This is also a superficial, corny response. Guston's attitude to the world-historical crisis was typically oblique. Before war had truly affected the United States, Bombardment gave it a full-blown cinematic treatment. In 1941, though, Guston retreated from the front line, as it were, to the relative heartland of the Midwest for six years' teaching in Iowa City and St. Louis. His work followed suit. It delved into artifice, memory, and fable. So while Poliock mapped his cosmic webs and Rothko, Still, and Newman distilled their paintings' residual personages or biomorphs into airy veils, solid walls, and lu minous measures of color, Guston stayed intent on telling tales.

Every protagonist in Guston's set pieces of the 19405 enacts some kind of role-playing, masquerade, or gesture. The children of Martial Memory perform their gladiatorial games, those of If This Be Not I play hide-and-seek, and Porch No. r and No. 2 present a silent parade of body language: Hands rise to faces, a head turns to the viewer, and another's eyes are shut tight. The last vestige of these secretive goings-on is the nailstudded shoe sole and outline of a Klansman's punitive upraised arm in The Tormentors. Less dramatic scenes such as Sunday Interior, 1941, and Sanctuary, 1944, still hint at events elsewhere because their single figures are so obviously (and sentimentally) caught in the act of memory, gazing beyond the picture. The very source of If This Be Not I's title is the most rudimentary of recitals, a nursery rhyme, told to Guston by his wife, Musa. All the elements of these compositions therefore signal narrative impulses--the urge to make sense of circumstances--even as the stories being told are enigmatic, frozen, fragmentary, or lost. Indeed, this is their subtler point.

American culture of the 19405 was laden with witnesses whose discourse either trailed off in silence or would not cohere cohere (kōhēr´),
v to stick together, to unite, to form a solid mass.
 realistically. In his 1989 analysis of film noir, Voices in the Dark, J.P. Telotte scrutinized this phenomenon. Telotte suggests that the cinematic emphasis in the period on voice-overs, plots (and/or intricate mise-en-scene) foregrounding their own artifice, and the device of the subjective camera were strategies that articulated the pervasive crisis of identity--threats to how the self endures alienation--brought on by the pressures of war, Holocaust, cold war, and so forth. Nor was noir's conflicted narration an isolated practice. Take one further example. Just as the person referenced in the title of If This Be Not I is someone who has lost their identity and Gusron's children hide theirs with masks and hats, so the antihero of Norman Mailer's novel Barbary Shore--published in 1951 yet a summary of the traumas of the preceding years--is an amnesiac who cannot recognize his face in the m irror.

Like the complex mazes of noir dramaturgy dram·a·tur·gy  
n.
The art of the theater, especially the writing of plays.



drama·tur
 and the battleground of actions and personae in Barbary Shore, the pictorial armatures of Guston's late-'40s canvases are a constructive fabric whose goal has knowingly been suppressed to leave a junkyard jumble. They are the detritus of plots, an elegiac el·e·gi·ac  
adj.
1. Of, relating to, or involving elegy or mourning or expressing sorrow for that which is irrecoverably past: an elegiac lament for youthful ideals.

2.
 farewell to the big didactic programs that his murals of the '30s had enunciated. This explains why the ubiquitous note is melancholia MELANCHOLIA, med. jur. A name given by the ancients to a species of partial intellectual mania, now more generally known by the name of monomania. (q.v.) It bore this name because it was supposed to be always attended by dejection of mind and gloomy ideas. Vide Mania.,  (see, for example, the forlorn toys of Holiday, 1944). As art historian Emily Braun observes in her recent study of Mario Sironi, melancholy tended to triumph once modernism's ambiguities dismantled the old bases--for instance, a clear relation between sign and meaning--upon which classical allegory was anchored.

For Guston at the end of the '40s things have taken their revenge. They crowd out an orderly human presence that is increasingly petrified pet·ri·fy  
v. pet·ri·fied, pet·ri·fy·ing, pet·ri·fies

v.tr.
1. To convert (wood or other organic matter) into a stony replica by petrifaction.

2.
 and pressed flat into the picture plane, leaving mere tracery tracery, bands or bars of stone, wood, or other material, either subdividing an opening or standing in relief against a wall and forming an ornamental pattern of solid members and open spaces. . Silence, too, is implied by the darkness that fills The Tormentors. In Review, 1949-50, the fragmentary shapes frozen under a nocturnal upper field function like syllables spoken in darkness.

There is also a wider existential truth at stake. Speaking against death--as with the princess Scheherazade, whose yarns kept her alive so long as they lasted--constitutes (Telotte aptly quotes Foucault on this score) "a task as old as the world." And here we would do well to fast-forward between two crucial ruptures in Guston's trajectory.

The first break came around 1950, when recognizable objects and threats were repressed in his idiom; the second around 1967, when they returned like inexorable revenants after having struggled through the semantic fog that shrouds Close-Up III, 1961, and its successors. The touchstone of this final phase occurs with Painter's Forms, 1972. On a flesh-colored field the painter's mouth spews forth a shoe, a bottle, his initials, and other items as though they were speech. With eyes shut, the message of his art is to pronounce things. Why? Rilke provides the clearest explanation of this "talking cure" in his Ninth Duino Elegy. There, the sole antidote to alienation, to the homelessness that besets the modern condition, exists in the power of language to incarnate feeling and touch the bedrock of reality:

Perhaps we are here in order to say: house, bridge, fountain, gate, pitcher, fruit-tree, window... Here is the time for the sayable, here is its homeland. Speak and bear witness [...].

By no coincidence, death and violence were major catalysts spurring Guston's return to figuration fig·u·ra·tion  
n.
1. The act of forming something into a particular shape.

2. A shape, form, or outline.

3. The act of representing with figures.

4. A figurative representation.

5.
 after around 1967. He subsequently confessed how the Vietnam War and its demonstrations triggered memories of the Scottsboro Boys--an incident that had prompted his early Klansmen groups--and that the jumbles of legs that became a leitmotif leit·mo·tif also leit·mo·tiv  
n.
1. A melodic passage or phrase, especially in Wagnerian opera, associated with a specific character, situation, or element.

2. A dominant and recurring theme, as in a novel.
 in the '70s were linked to photographs of the concentration camps. Small wonder, then, that Rilke's injunction to "speak and bear witness--in effect, a naming of the artist's ur-forms into existence--should be the implicit rationale behind Guston's eventual and pervasive flypapering of art and language. A typical matrix of the late phantasmagoria phan·tas·ma·go·ri·a or phan·tas·ma·go·ry
n. pl. phan·tas·ma·go·ri·as or phan·tas·ma·go·ries
A fantastic sequence of haphazardly associative imagery, as seen in dreams or fever.
 happens to be a codex codex

Manuscript book, especially of Scripture, early literature, or ancient mythological or historical annals. The earliest type of manuscript in the form of a modern book (i.e.
: First Book, 1967.

Given that Nazi atrocities were on Guston's mind while assembling the dark scenarios of Porch and the charnel char·nel  
n.
A repository for the bones or bodies of the dead; a charnel house.

adj.
Resembling, suggesting, or suitable for receiving the dead.
 house--like Night Children, 1946, it is notable that this particular pictorial drive petered out with his turn to abstraction after 1950. That Nazi horrors might be too awful to describe, that they defied belief, was a frequent thought in the United States at the time (as traced in Deborah Lipstadt's 1986 account of the subject, Beyond Belief: The American Press and the Coming of the Holocaust, 1933-45). In the catalogue to the 2000 exhibition "Philip Guston: A New Alphabet" (co-organized by the Yale University Art Gallery The Yale University Art Gallery houses a significant and encyclopedic collection of art in several buildings on the campus of Yale University in New Haven, Connecticut. Although it embraces all cultures and periods, the Gallery possesses especially renowned collections of early  and the Fogg Art Museum The Fogg Art Museum is the oldest of Harvard University's art museums. It covers the history of western art from the Middle Ages to the present. It opened to the public in 1895 and was originally housed in an Italian Renaissance style building designed by Richard Morris Hunt ), cocurator Harry Cooper therefore rightly proposes that the artist's reborn figuration entailed an uncanny Freudian return of the repressed (not to mention Guston's long-distant trauma of discovering his father's suicide by hanging). Can we can go further in this direction?

If so, I suspect that the abstractions of the 1950s should be likened to Freudian screen memories, a pictorial barrier fabricated to mask content more terrible and never fully worked through--at least not until, that is, Guston recollected them once and for all in the grand fabulations (two titles, Allegory, 1975, and Legend, 1977, trumpet their made-up nature) of his final two decades. Having "got sick and tired of all that purity...[Guston] wanted to tell Stories!" In short, the nasty business of the late '40S was unfinished. Thus it returned with such a telling--in both meanings of the word--impetus at the last. Murder--whether in the guise of his father's suicide, the Klan's deadly tricks, wartime bombardment, or Nazi annihilation--must out. Guston felt compelled to create a "new alphabet" because he knew his old language had not told all of its tales.

Meanwhile, however, the abstractions of the '505 mark time. They weave seductive screens from a multitude of delicate brush dabs that promise to coalesce into a readable array but don't--Abstract Expressionist equivalents to Homer's Penelope, who constantly wove, and just as constantly unraveled, her threads. I doubt whether Guston was quite himself in this phase as he assimilated the merest feedback from Rothko's tinted scrims, de Kooning's edgy rhythms, and both the latter's and Pollock's formulation of the image as process. (Parallels also obtain with the tremulous tremulous /trem·u·lous/ (-u-lus) pertaining to or characterized by tremors.

trem·u·lous
adj.
Characterized by tremor.
 grids of Ibram Lassaw's sculpture.) The current retrospective from Fort Worth should provide us ample opportunity to judge how well these Gustons compete against the classic Rothkos, Newmans, Stills, and Pollocks of the period. Although they may not leave him behind, the chances are that neither will Guston go down in history for this chunk of his output alone.

If my perspective on the painter's canvases from the '50s is right, they amount to a hedonistic he·don·ism  
n.
1. Pursuit of or devotion to pleasure, especially to the pleasures of the senses.

2. Philosophy The ethical doctrine holding that only what is pleasant or has pleasant consequences is intrinsically good.
 intermezzo intermezzo (ĭntərmĕt`sō, –mĕd`zō).

1 Any theatrical entertainment of a light nature performed between the divisions of a longer, more serious work.

2 In the 17th and 18th cent.
 between the work produced in the previous fraught decades and the ferocious endgame Endgame

blind and chair-bound, Hamm learns that nearly everybody has died; his own parents are dying in separate trash cans. [Anglo-Fr. Drama: Beckett Endgame in Weiss, 143]

See : Death
 Guston resumed by unearthing his foundational themes in the 1960s. Robert Storr discerns a clue in their reference to Watreau--a canvas of 1957 was titled Cythera. To be sure, Guston maintains throughout the '50s a fine bel canto, allowing the pleasure principle to infiltrate his palette with delicious results: tints of chartreuse chartreuse (shärtrz`), liqueur made exclusively by Carthusians at their monastery, La Grande Chartreuse, France, until their expulsion in 1903. , rose, bronze and gunmetal gunmetal, a bronze, an alloy of copper, tin, and a small amount of zinc. Although originally used extensively for making guns (from which it received its name), it has been superseded by steel, and it is now chiefly employed in casting machine parts.  gray that may be their most original aspect. Then the mood clouds over at the close of the decade. The congealed con·geal  
v. con·gealed, con·geal·ing, con·geals

v.intr.
1. To solidify by or as if by freezing: "My aim . . . was to take the Hill by storm before . . .
 shreds imply pressures building beneath the surface. The painter's joy in color is up against reverberations from the grim murk murk also mirk  
n.
Partial or total darkness; gloom.

adj. Archaic
Partially or totally dark; gloomy.



[Middle English mirke, from Old Norse myrkr
 of matter. Textures are smeared, shapes ragged, and tones dirtied. Mirages threaten to become nightmares. Aptly, Guston cited "erasure" regarding the "dark pictures" that lasted until 1965. The past held much to blot out.

But rather than erase, Guston at the eleventh hour did the opposite. He amplified the old voices. The magnetism of his new figuration is inseparable from its being writ large--sometimes in the sheer size of his '70s compositions and always metaphorically in the gargantuan coarseness of his cartoonish drawing. Everything looms on a Brobdingnagian scale--hoods, heads, feet, easels, flames, bugs, and horizons--that will admit no finely delineated niceties ni·ce·ty  
n. pl. ni·ce·ties
1. The quality of showing or requiring careful, precise treatment: the nicety of a diplomatic exchange.

2.
. The air of grotesque magnification transforms Dantesque terror into comedy and silent gravity into graveyard humor. It is Guston's last joke about vision's transgressive force to reimagine the theatrum mundi afresh. The painter masters and martials the parts of a universe that had once been reduced to traces. No other member of his generation before then had taken raw emotions and projected them onto an IMAX IMAX
Noun

a film projection process that produces an image ten times larger than standard
 screen of this expressive magnitude.

Needless to add, though, Guston's representational blasphemy maintained an impeccable lineage. To see the quiddity quid·di·ty  
n. pl. quid·di·ties
1. The real nature of a thing; the essence.

2. A hairsplitting distinction; a quibble.
 of everyday facts has often been a fresh starting point for artists since at least Chardin. Listen to the Frenchman as reported by his biographer Charles-Nicolas Cochin: "Here is an object which I must aim to reproduce," he said to himself. "In order to concentrate my mind on reproducing it faithfully, I must forget everything I have seen, even including the manner in which such objects have been handled by others." Now hear Guston: "I imagine wanting to paint as a cave man would. ... I should like to paint like a man who has never seen a painting." It requires extreme aesthetic sophistication so·phis·ti·cate  
v. so·phis·ti·cat·ed, so·phis·ti·cat·ing, so·phis·ti·cates

v.tr.
1. To cause to become less natural, especially to make less naive and more worldly.

2.
 to reach such a primitive beginning. Maybe the otherwise improbable cherries found in Curtain, 1977, and Untitled (Cherries), 1980, were Guston's sly homage to his French predecessor who delineated those fruits with trademark delicacy.

The gigantic heads with one staring eyeball--caricatural self-portraits--that populate the late work embody Guston's terminal mode of seeing. It overturns a venerable American love affair with the transcendent: the myth that vision (literal and spiritual) can conquer its material embodiment, leave language behind and transport us to higher realms. Emerson epitomized this view in a moot passage in his essay "Nature": "Standing on the bare ground--my head bathed by the blithe blithe  
adj. blith·er, blith·est
1. Carefree and lighthearted.

2. Lacking or showing a lack of due concern; casual: spoke with blithe ignorance of the true situation.
 air and uplifted into infinite space--all mean egotism Egotism
See also Arrogance, Conceit, Individualism.

Baxter, Ted

TV anchorman who sees himself as most important news topic. [TV: “The Mary Tyler Moore Show” in Terrace, II, 70]

cat
 vanishes. I become a transparent eyeball... the currents of the Universal Being circulate through me." Regardless of whether Guston knew Emerson, he was surely familiar with the Abstract Expressionist variant of such oculocentrism. In 1947 Rothko wrote about making "transcendental experiences" possible through his art and personified their herald in Tiresias, 1944, named after the mythic Greek seer whom he depicts with a transparent body topped by a Cyclopean Cyclopean (sīkləpē`ən), name often applied to a primitive method of prehistoric masonry construction, found throughout Greece, Italy, and the Middle East.  orb-head. Newman, Still, R ichard Pousette-Dart, and others all duly paid their own lip service, verbal and imagistic, to "transcendence," "Vision," "revelation," and the like.

At the last, Guston brilliantly critiqued this visionary idealism--the mind-over-matter rhetoric--of Abstract Expressionism. His heads instead see the baseness of life at its most primal: feet (what could be more base than our soles?), books (in the beginning was the word), abjection (Head and Bottle, 1975, thrusts the artist's gaze facedown on his liquid muse), and the formless form·less  
adj.
1. Having no definite form; shapeless. See Synonyms at shapeless.

2. Lacking order.

3. Having no material existence.
 (since for Guston speech/language concretizes vision, his blockish block·ish  
adj.
Resembling a block, as in shape.



blockish·ly adv.

block
 forms, as Cooper proposed, shift identities with the same metonymical me·ton·y·my  
n. pl. me·ton·y·mies
A figure of speech in which one word or phrase is substituted for another with which it is closely associated, as in the use of Washington for the United States government or of
 slipperiness that enables us to name a single thought with diverse related words).

An insight into Guston's ultimate mentality may also come from an otherwise remote source that was doubtless unknown to him, the Polish poet Czeslaw Milosz. In A Treatise on Poetry, 1955-56, Miosz deals with the same sentiment of shattered history and self as did the early Guston. Indeed, Part III of the poem surveys Warsaw under Nazi bombardment. In turn its language mirrors the ruinous, down-home fragments that the late Guston elevates to the status of dumb witnesses, opaque bric-a-brac summoned from memory as nouns in a bleak imaginative landscape:
When gold paint flakes from the arms of sculptures,
When the letter falls Out of the book of laws,
Then consciousness is naked as an eye.

When the pages of books fall in fiery scraps
Onto smashed leaves and twisted metal,
The tree of good and evil is stripped bare.

When a wing made of canvas is extinguished
In a potato patch, when steel disintegrates,
Nothing is left but straw huts and cow dung.


In such passages Milosz leads us closer to the crux--and possibly nearer than most art historians could manage--of Guston's genius in broaching a terrain that would soon fall to, say, Anselm Kiefer to navigate to the fullest. Memory, matter, and metaphor are its agents and exert themselves on what Milosz calls "the dirt of our subjectivity" and Guston, referring to paint itself, defined as "colored dirt." Both use irony and humor to cement the fragments. Those qualities inflect in·flect  
v. in·flect·ed, in·flect·ing, in·flects

v.tr.
1. To alter (the voice) in tone or pitch; modulate.

2. Grammar To alter (a word) by inflection.

3.
 Guston's climactic creations toward a genre that few commentators have noticed--carnival. To the best of my knowledge, only the British painter-critic Timothy Hyman has rated Guston's post-1968 mischief as "epicscaled carnivalesque."

As famously investigated by Mikhail Bakhtin (I'm reluctant to revive this warhorse of academe, but nobody else will do so well), the key to the structure of the ancient tradition of carnival is ambiguity. Carnivalesque humor embraces opposites-in-tension and consequently lends itself to such variable wavelengths as macabre laughter and grotesque realism. Nothing better captures the raunchy, manic-depressive antics of late Guston, who, true to carnival's dictates, donned his mask in pictorial terms to ride around town with "hoods." His subsequent deluges of heads and assorted anatomies (including Nixon's phlebitic leg) constitute a singular variant of Bakhtin's "tumultuous crowd" and its flaunting of the abject, grotesque body. Good and bad are also reversed during carnival, which turns protocol topsy-turvy. Similarly, Guston "almost tried to imagine that I was living with the Klan. What would it be like to be evil? To plan, to plot." The association of painting with plotting and evil invokes Degas, who compa red making art to perpetrating a crime. That brings us full circle.

In The Genesis of Secrecy--a dazzling inquiry into biblical narrative and its progeny--Frank Kermode demonstrates how the process of telling/interpreting stories is deeply imbricated imbricated /im·bri·cat·ed/ (im´bri-kat?id) overlapping like shingles.

imbricated

overlapping like shingles or roof slates or tiles.
 with deception and trickery. For example, ancient lore portrays Hermes, the mythic founding father of hermeneutics hermeneutics, the theory and practice of interpretation. During the Reformation hermeneutics came into being as a special discipline concerned with biblical criticism. , as a "trickster, a robber" because he violates boundaries (by, among various practices, conveying souls to and from the underworld). Modern fictive fic·tive  
adj.
1. Of, relating to, or able to engage in imaginative invention.

2. Of, relating to, or being fiction; fictional.

3. Not genuine; sham.
 plots as we now understand them have a precursor in parables and midrash, the Talmudic practice of weaving new commentaries around existing narratives.

Guston told his friend the poet Bill Berkson that with his insurgent INSURGENT. One who is concerned in an insurrection. He differs from a rebel in this, that rebel is always understood in a bad sense, or one who unjustly opposes the constituted authorities; insurgent may be one who justly opposes the tyranny of constituted authorities.  figuration he had rediscovered the "pleasures of narrative" and deemed the images akin to "ancient manuscripts." Maybe his fables at the easel belied a distant Talmudic ancestry in their urge to generate plots out of a chaotic universe, a "book" otherwise without sense or ending. Certainly, the horseshoes that clutter Tomb, 1978, and the pressing-irons elsewhere parody the biblical speech of God in Revelation, who names himself the alpha and (horseshoe-shaped Greek letter) omega of existence. The Line, 1978, even portrays the divine hand as that of a painter delineating genesis from out of a cloud. Here and in other terse legends--the conspirators of Cabal Cabal (kəbăl`), inner group of advisers to Charles II of England. Their initials form the word (which is, however, of older origin)—Clifford of Chudleigh, Ashley (Lord Shaftesbury), Buckingham (George Villiers), Arlington (Henry Bennet), , 1977, and the fiery brazier smoldering smol·der also smoul·der  
intr.v. smol·dered, smol·der·ing, smol·ders
1. To burn with little smoke and no flame.

2.
 in the darkness of Flame, 1979--all the previous urgent storytelling quietens to the enigmatic tenor of parables. Having started some forty years before with the big bang of Bombardment, Guston concludes in apocalyptic and infinitely eloquent whispe rs.

David Anfam is a London-based art historian. (See Contributors.)

DAVID ANFAM is an art historian, lecturer, and commissioning editor at Phaidon Press, Ltd. A regular reviewer for the Burlington Magazine, he is the author of Abstract Expressionism (Thames & Hudson, 1990) and Mark Rothko: The Works on Canvas--A Catalogue Raisonne (Yale University Press, 1998), which received both the 1998 George Wittenborn Memorial Award and the 2000 Mitchell Prize. Anfam has also written on Franz Kline, Clyfford Still, Arshile Gorky, and, most recently, Alfred Jensen. In this issue, he reconsiders the art of Philip Guston on the occasion of a traveling retrospective of the artist's work curated by Michael Auping and on view at the Modern Art Museum of Fort Worth The Modern Art Museum of Fort Worth (widely referred to as The Modern) was first granted a Charter from the State of Texas in 1892 as the "Fort Worth Public Library and Art Gallery", evolving through several name changes and different facilities in Fort Worth.  through June 8.
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Title Annotation:Biography; Painter Philip Guston's career examined
Author:Anfam, David
Publication:Artforum International
Article Type:Critical Essay
Date:May 1, 2003
Words:3746
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