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Yo Morris.


In an interview conducted as his recent retrospective at the Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum: see Guggenheim Museum. , 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
, was about to open (Artforum, April 1994), Robert Morris was asked his views on the large topic of "other artists." He answered in a noncommittal way, saying that he admired any number of artists of the past but specifying only his most obvious lodestone lodestone: see magnetite.  in Marcel Duchamp Noun 1. Marcel Duchamp - French artist who immigrated to the United States; a leader in the dada movement in New York City; was first to exhibit commonplace objects as art (1887-1968)
Duchamp
. "The only one I vaguely despise," he added, "is Picasso."

Having read this exchange on my way to the Guggenheim, it stayed with me as I walked through the exhibition, for the one other artist who insistently kept coming to mind was none other than Picasso--a fact that suggests some disavowed Disavowed is a brutal death metal band from Amsterdam/Rotterdam/Den Helder,The Netherlands and Cannes South of France.

They have released two albums, one in 2002, on the American label Unique Leader called 'Perceptive Deception' and one in 2007 on Neurotic Records called
 self-knowledge in Morris' remark. Of course there were others whose actual imprint on the work was far more obvious and expected: Duchamp, Jasper Johns Noun 1. Jasper Johns - United States artist and proponent of pop art (born in 1930)
Johns
, Barry Le Va, Robert Smithson Robert Smithson (January 2, 1938–July 20, 1973) was an American artist famous for his land art.

Smithson was born in Passaic, New Jersey and studied painting and drawing in New York City at the Art Students League.
, Chris Burden Chris Burden (born in Boston, Massachusetts in 1946) is an American artist.

He studied visual arts, physics and architecture at Yale College and the University of California, Irvine from 1969 to 1971.
, even (surprisingly for me) Morris Louis Morris Louis (Morris Louis Bernstein) (November 28, 1912 - September 7, 1962) is a United States abstract expressionist painter, one of the many such painters to emerge in the 1950s.  in certain of the hanging felt pieces of the late '60s, which mimic as wall relief the compositions of that painter's "Veils" and "Unfurleds." All but the last dependency have long been staples of commentary on Morris, both in published criticism and in the murmuring background of resentful art-world gossip. So pervasive has been the charge that Morris has made a career by habitually helping himself to other people's ideas that David Antin's catalogue essay for the Guggenheim takes it as a guiding theme. Antin labels the accusation the "Roberta Smith problem," in honor of the latter critic having bluntly raised the issue in a dismissive review of the artist's latest series of paintings.(1) Then Smith, as if challenging Antin's ad feminam attempt to contain the issue, drove home precisely the same point in an equally unimpressed review of the Guggenheim retrospective, also for the New York Times.(2) Peter Schjeldahl was if anything more antagonistic and belittling be·lit·tle  
tr.v. be·lit·tled, be·lit·tling, be·lit·tles
1. To represent or speak of as contemptibly small or unimportant; disparage: a person who belittled our efforts to do the job right.
 in The Village Voice, this coming from a critic who in 1972 had reported (for the Times) on the lionization of Morris in the New York scene of that period, calling him "a nearly transcendent art world presence, an artist who, it seemed, could do no wrong."(3) Plainly old conflicts are resurfacing. The strange outcome is that an artist who once enjoyed such automatic deference finds the dominant critical media of his own city virtually closed to sympathetic consideration of his achievement.

But how kind and tolerant by contrast has posterity been to Picasso, an artist whose early fashioning of a career in Paris has a great deal in common with Morris' tactics of the '60s in New York. Defenders of the latter artist are forced to deflect accusations of opportunism Opportunism
Arabella, Lady

squire’s wife matchmakes with money in mind. [Br. Lit.: Doctor Thorne]

Ashkenazi, Simcha

shrewdly and unscrupulously becomes merchant prince. [Yiddish Lit.
 by declaring that his mobility of manners and media constitutes a challenge to conventional notions of an autograph style. With Picasso, on the other hand, no such defense has been required; the positive idea of unending fecundity fecundity /fe·cun·di·ty/ (fe-kun´dit-e)
1. in demography, the physiological ability to reproduce, as opposed to fertility.

2. ability to produce offspring rapidly and in large numbers.
 has successfully legitimized a strikingly similar kind of expediency, that is, the ease with which he processed anything in his vicinity, particularly the innovations of other artists who followed a slow-growing, meditative approach.

"Painters," he once declared to the young Francoise Gilot, "no longer live within a tradition and so each one of us must recreate an entire language. Every painter of our times is fully authorized to recreate that language from A to Z."(4) It would be no surprise to encounter Morris imparting similar words to his literary confidant W. J. T. Mitchell--he has said as much in his previous writing.(5) At the same time, the practice of each conspicuously confirms the truth that no language worth the name can be invented from scratch. Long before the mid teens, when Picasso famously turned from Cubism cubism, art movement, primarily in painting, originating in Paris c.1907. Cubist Theory


Cubism began as an intellectual revolt against the artistic expression of previous eras.
 to portraits in the classical manner of Ingres, he had been working through and discarding available models in a determined effort to secure attention and finally dominance in a world he had entered in 1900 as a tongue-tied and unpolished outsider. Toulouse-Lautrec and Gauguin served his purpose at the start; then of course came Cezanne, but to compare the Demoiselles d'Avignon with any of that artist's great "Bathers" is to discover how the latecomer's comparative weakness was turned to tactical advantage. While Cezanne presents the record of an agonized ag·o·nize  
v. ag·o·nized, ag·o·niz·ing, ag·o·niz·es

v.intr.
1. To suffer extreme pain or great anguish.

2. To make a great effort; struggle.

v.tr.
 process of reconciling vision with tactile longing while accommodating both within a resistant medium, Picasso's Demoiselles converts his predecessor's vocabulary into a collection of hard and confident shapes--even his famous second thoughts and alterations were rendered with decisive panache. During his first Cubist period of intimate collaboration with Georges Braque, Picasso processed their joint discoveries into paintings at triple the rate of his French colleague (and then multiplied that advantage by receiving several times more money for each canvas from their shared dealer).

The imbalance in the history of Cubist sculpture is even more pronounced. It was Braque who first conceived the practice, making constructions in paper over the summer of 1911, but he thought of them as temporary researches. Taking up the practice more than a year later, Picasso, typically, preserved his experiments and made the move to more permanent materials. None of Braque's models survive; Picasso's Guitar, probably finished late in 1912 and patently derived from them, is credited with generating the entire history of constructed sculpture in the 20th century.

This spring in London, as it happens, art consciousness has largely been dominated by the exhibition "Picasso: Sculptor/Painter," at the Tate Gallery, conceived and curated by Elizabeth Cowling and John Golding. It has enjoyed a virtually unanimous critical success (with crowds to match), but is marked throughout by the usual evasion, dictated by a single-artist biographical imperative, of the collaborative relationship behind its subject's achievements. The intelligibility of the show's initial section is vitiated vi·ti·ate  
tr.v. vi·ti·at·ed, vi·ti·at·ing, vi·ti·ates
1. To reduce the value or impair the quality of.

2. To corrupt morally; debase.

3. To make ineffective; invalidate.
 by the absence of Braque, a suppression that is consistent with the obsessional drive of even the most informed Cubist scholarship, William Rubin's as well as Golding's, to secure evidence of Picasso's irrepressible singularity and superiority in assessing the one period when he had those burdens lifted from him. The simple fact is that none of what he did in those years would have been possible outside of the partnership. Joint creative responsibility, then, must be privileged over individual manual execution.

The key to any adequate historical understanding of Picasso is grasping his acuity in synthesizing the best art in his vicinity; the same, obviously, can be said of Morris, and in light of that distinguished prototype the "Roberta Smith problem" does indeed seem to be an unimaginative response to the artist's undeniable weight. But the traditionally solo format of the Guggenheim exhibition, exactly parallel to that of the Tate's "Picasso," bears some responsibility for eliciting the sort of dismissal voiced in the New York press Coordinates:

New York Press is a free alternative weekly in New York City. It is the main competitor to the Village Voice.
. The die-cut, hide-and-seek play with the 1962 I-Box on the catalogue cover (his name blocks out the penis in the photograph of his naked body) takes for granted an outmoded fascination with Morris' person that might usefully have been downplayed at this date. The various ironies long recognized in that object--patiently spelled out by Mitchell in his catalogue essay--might have provided a warning against just such a use of the image; to deploy it as an announcement for a traditional retrospective washes even those simple paradoxes away.

How much more meaningful would the appearance of 1-Box have been with Johns' Target with Plaster Casts, 1955, somewhere nearby, with its various body parts, including the impression of a penis, behind the small hinged doors. Its omission is exactly like leaving Braque out of a display of Picasso's Cubism, despite its maker's having been an involuntary partner in the transaction. The dependence of I-Box on Johns' vocabulary is so complete, down to his signature stencil stencil, cutout device of oiled or shellacked tough and resistant paper, thin metal, or other material used in applying paint, dye, or ink to reproduce its design or lettering upon a surface.  typeface, that it must be taken as a primary point of the work. To attend to Morris' transformation of his prototype is to leave aside the work's pat ironies the better to follow the ways in which the newcomer sought to insert a legible identity for himself into an established scene by reversing certain of its defining components. The body in pieces is integrated; implicit injury becomes cheerful health; technical devices designed to preserve reticence and disguise are made to signal brash self-disclosure: Yo Picasso. The collaborators whom Morris has lately recruited from text-based academic disciplines might automatically write off this line of thought as an art historian's reflex. I suspect, however, that it permits the soundest tribute to the artist's genuine importance, not least because it diverts attention from his frequent philosophical overreaching Exploiting a situation through Fraud or Unconscionable conduct. .

One result of making Morris' opportunism a matter for serious analysis would be to highlight his moments, now rather obscured, of prescient pre·scient  
adj.
1. Of or relating to prescience.

2. Possessing prescience.



[French, from Old French, from Latin praesci
 invention. Both his early Hand and Toe Holds and the Minimalist mesh sculptures, for example, stand comparison with anything being done in the period and certainly had a great deal to teach the currently fashionable Bruce Nauman (whose self-fashioning in turn offers many points of comparison to Morris'). The collating of recorded events in the 1962 Card File was the seed of the mammoth Index assembled by Art & Language a decade later. With the tangled felt sculptures, Morris found a way simply to stand back and allow Minimalism's fetishized geometry to implode To link component pieces to a major assembly. It may also refer to compressing data using a particular technique. Contrast with explode.  into an image of its expressionist ex·pres·sion·ism  
n.
A movement in the arts during the early part of the 20th century that emphasized subjective expression of the artist's inner experiences.



ex·pres
 opposite. The "Blind Time" drawings of 1973 refine this investigation of expression still further. Summing up the entire New York School New York school

Painters who participated in the development of contemporary art, particularly Abstract Expressionism, in or around New York City in the 1940s and '50s.
 epoch that had gone before, and forecasting the return of gestural painting, these experiments isolated the conventions of expressive appearance as purely a product of somatic somatic /so·mat·ic/ (so-mat´ik)
1. pertaining to or characteristic of the soma or body.

2. pertaining to the body wall in contrast to the viscera.


so·mat·ic
adj.
 weakness. Their deviated geometries promise an abundance of emotive rewards but deliver only traces of bodily machinery reaching beyond its limits. And on that strictly antiemotive premise, the trace of the artist's hand managed for a moment to evade the alibi of irony.

Thomas Crow is a contributing editor of Artforum.

1. David Antin, "Have Mind, Will Travel," in Robert Morris: The Mind/Body Problem, exhibition catalogue, New York: Guggenheim Museum Publications, 1994, pp. 34-49; Roberta Smith, "A Hypersensitive hy·per·sen·si·tive
adj.
Responding excessively to the stimulus of a foreign agent, such as an allergen; abnormally sensitive.



hy
 Nose for the Next Thing," The New York Times, 20 January 1991.

2. Smith, "A Robert Morris Tour of Contemporary History," The New York Times, 4 February 1994, p. C24.

3. Peter Schjeldahl, "The Smartass Problem," The Village Voice, 1 March 1994, and "Robert Morris: Maxi of the Minimals," The New York Times, 7 May 1972. I owe the latter reference to Richard Meyer.

4. See Francoise Gilot and Carlton Lake, Life with Picasso, London: Virago, 1990, p. 67.

5. Robert Morris, "Three Folds in the Fabric and Four Autobiographical Asides as Allegories (or Interruptions)," Art in America Art in America, published since 1913, is an illustrated monthly art magazine covering the visual art world both in the US and abroad, but concentrating on New York City.  77 no. 11, November 1989, p. 144: "When I sliced into the plywood with my Skilsaw, I could hear, beneath the ear-damaging whine, a stark and refreshing 'no' reverberate re·ver·ber·ate  
v. re·ver·ber·at·ed, re·ver·ber·at·ing, re·ver·ber·ates

v.intr.
1. To resound in a succession of echoes; reecho.

2.
 off the four walls: no to transcendence and spiritual values, heroic scale, anguished decisions, historicizing narrative, valuable artifact, intelligent structure, interesting visual experience."
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No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
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Title Annotation:sculptor Robert Morris
Author:Crow, Thomas
Publication:Artforum International
Date:Jun 22, 1994
Words:1813
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