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“Art is an outlet toward regions which are not ruled by time and space”
— Marcel Duchamp

Avant-Guardian Musings is a curated space of ideas and information, resources, reviews and readings for undergraduate and graduate students studying modern and contemporary art history and visual art theory, film and photography studies, and the expanding field of visual culture and screen studies. For students currently enrolled in my courses or the field school, the blog and associated social media links also serve as a place of reflection and an extension of the ideas and visual material raised in lecture and seminar discussion.

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Blog
Making Sense of Art in the Age of Machine Learning—A Suggested Reading List
Making Sense of Art in the Age of Machine Learning—A Suggested Reading List
about a week ago
From the Archives | How (And Why) To Take Excellent Lecture Notes
From the Archives | How (And Why) To Take Excellent Lecture Notes
about 11 months ago
Weekly Musings + Round Up... And A Few More Things
Weekly Musings + Round Up... And A Few More Things
about 2 years ago
Weekly Musings + Round Up... And A Few More Things
about 2 years ago
Weekly Musings + Round Up... And A Few More Things
Weekly Musings + Round Up... And A Few More Things
about 2 years ago

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Today, I visited Sicily’s contemporary art museum in Palazzo Riso, another converted baroque palace that was heavily bombed during WWII after local fascists made it their headquarters. I love thinking how much those people would have hated the
Today, I visited Sicily’s contemporary art museum in Palazzo Riso, another converted baroque palace that was heavily bombed during WWII after local fascists made it their headquarters. I love thinking how much those people would have hated the kind of art that occupies this space and lives on its walls. This art does not celebrate beauty, nor does it tell audiences what to think, who to love, or what rules or political leaders to follow— it is art that deliberately creates questions, discomfort, and provocation while asking audiences to shape the final meaning. Even today, here in Palermo, I discovered through conversation with locals that there are many who criticize and attack the works (artworks by non-Italians, women, people of colour, gay people, and those who use unconventional materials and approaches to art-making) exhibited in the space. It appears the culture wars are again reshaping Italy as they did 80 years ago. History does not repeat itself, as the Mark Twain saying goes, but it does rhyme. Pay attention. Among the artists pictured here: Vanessa Beecroft, Regina Jose Galindo, Herman Nitsch Christian Boltanski, Cesare Viel, Sergio Zavattieri, Loredana Longo, Carla Accardi, Richard Long, William Kentridge . . . #contemporyart #arthistory #sicily #palermo #italy #artwork #artmuseum
How to describe the Palazzo Butera in Sicily? Take a baroque palace on the edge of the Mediterranean Sea, restore it with great care, and then fill it with your collection of contemporary art, antiquities, ephemera, and a sprinkle of modern and Renai
How to describe the Palazzo Butera in Sicily? Take a baroque palace on the edge of the Mediterranean Sea, restore it with great care, and then fill it with your collection of contemporary art, antiquities, ephemera, and a sprinkle of modern and Renaissance works. Add a beautiful cafe with a terrace facing the sea and invite the public to admire it all. This is the best of what a private collection can be— bravo to the curators and anyone who had a hand in planning this space. It is breathtaking! A must visit if you come to Sicily. . . . #palermo #sicily #arthistory #contemporaryart #artcollection #palazzobutera #modernart #artmuseum
A stroll through Palermo capturing colour, light, and mood 💙
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#sicily #italy #palermo #urban #architecture #arthistory #flaneur
A stroll through Palermo capturing colour, light, and mood 💙 . . . #sicily #italy #palermo #urban #architecture #arthistory #flaneur
Buongiorno bella Sicilia! ✨I arrived in bustling Palermo after sunset last night just in time for a lovely al fresco dinner with my dynamic Urban Emotions research group, and awoke this morning to the beauty, light, and colour of Sicily, enjoying my
Buongiorno bella Sicilia! ✨I arrived in bustling Palermo after sunset last night just in time for a lovely al fresco dinner with my dynamic Urban Emotions research group, and awoke this morning to the beauty, light, and colour of Sicily, enjoying my coffee on my hotel’s rooftop terrace and strolling quiet streets as the city awoke. I will be here for the week participating in a round table discussion at the AISU Congress (Association of Italian Urban Historians) exploring the intersection of emotions, cities, and images with the wonderful individual researchers (from Italy, UK, Turkey, and the US) with whom I have been collaborating through online discussions and meetings for over a year. We first connected in Athens last summer at the EAHN European Architectural History Network Conference and have been working on a position paper that will be published later this year in the Architectural Histories journal expanding on our individual case studies to argue for the broader relevance of urban emotions as a multidisciplinary field of study. It is so wonderful to finally meet as a group and continue our conversations! . . . #urbanhistory #italy #palermo #sicily #arthistory #urbanemotions #contemporaryart
What are the books I would recommend to any artist, art historian, or curator if they wanted to get a critical handle on the state of art in the age of AI? I have some suggestions as I spent the past several months assembling a set of readings that w
What are the books I would recommend to any artist, art historian, or curator if they wanted to get a critical handle on the state of art in the age of AI? I have some suggestions as I spent the past several months assembling a set of readings that will shape the core questions of a course I will be teaching on this topic come fall at @kwantlenu @kpuarts @kpufinearts . By request, I am sharing the reading list and core questions on my blog (check out top link in bio) in an effort to encourage the consideration of these ideas to a wider audience. I hope to report back at the end of the semester about what I learned teaching this course, and I will be on the lookout for others in my field taking on this topic as a much-needed addition to the art school curriculum in the years to come. IMAGE: Lev Manovich’s exploratory art work from 2013 is made up of 50,000 Instagram images shared in Tokyo that are visualized in his lab one year later. . . . #contemporaryart #machinelearning #ai #artificalintelligence #arthistory #newpost #avantguardianmusings

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© Dorothy Barenscott, Avant-Guardian Musings, and dorothybarenscott.com, 2010-2023. Unauthorized use and/or duplication of this material without express and written permission from this blog’s author is strictly prohibited. Excerpts and links may be used, provided that full and clear credit is given to Dorothy Barenscott, Avant-Guardian Musings, and dorothybarenscott.com with appropriate and specific direction to the original content.

Lady AIKO, The Tale of Mr. Skull and Mermaids (2015), a street art mural first shown at Cony Art Walls, Cony Island, is heavily influenced by the Edo era Ukiyo-e prints that form an important part of Japanese visual culture.

Lady AIKO, The Tale of Mr. Skull and Mermaids (2015), a street art mural first shown at Cony Art Walls, Cony Island, is heavily influenced by the Edo era Ukiyo-e prints that form an important part of Japanese visual culture.

Location | Japan: Ukiyo-E and the Visual Culture of Everyday Life

April 12, 2018

To visit Japan in person is to be immersed in a non-stop aesthetic experience—an experience shaped by visual storytelling, fantasy, space-making, and attention at every level to artful detail, ranging from the luxurious to the most everyday and banal. This was perhaps my biggest takeaway impression of a place that has been at the very top of my travel bucket list for as long as I can remember. Not surprisingly, the country that has popularized manga and anime into universally recognized forms of mass contemporary visual culture also has a deeply entangled and shared history with Western forms of art. Enter Ukiyo-e print culture, and my own deep fascination with how representations of Japanese urban life came to influence the art of the fleeting and the everyday pioneered in Europe by the Impressionists and modern avant-garde art movements .

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Translated, Ukiyo-e literally means “pictures of the floating world” and helps categorize a style of Japanese woodblock painting and printmaking from the early 17th to late 19th century Edo period. Innovating techniques of production and wide distribution that would allow for popular consumption of these images throughout Japan and then around the world by the late nineteenth century, talented Japanese artists turned to printmaking as a way to connect with and share art to the widest possible audience. Importantly, the subject of Ukiyo-e prints references the fleeting nature and everyday instances of urban life, emphasizing pleasure, beauty, landscapes, and the fashions of the time. This, and overt references to the transformative nature of city life, would come to influence and align with French poet and art critic Charles Baudelaire’s challenge to artists of his time—to represent and draw inspiration from the everyday and ephemeral urban world around them, and not slavishly adhere to the traditions and forms of the ancient past. Critically, for Baudelaire, and the new generation of modern and avant-garde artists he would come to influence, this was more than just a change in the subject or content for art, it was also equally a revolution in the form of art. 

Edouard Manet, Portrait of Emile Zola (1868). Note the presence of Ukiyo-e prints on the far left and upper right register of Manet's painting-- a nod to the fashionable Japanese print culture that was part of the Paris urban scene from the mid…

Edouard Manet, Portrait of Emile Zola (1868). Note the presence of Ukiyo-e prints on the far left and upper right register of Manet's painting-- a nod to the fashionable Japanese print culture that was part of the Paris urban scene from the mid to late 19th century. 

The critical discussion of Ukiyo-e prints forms a key section of any course where I discuss the turn towards modernism in art. Representing the contemporary world was considered a revolutionary move away from the guiding purpose of high art, since at least the time of the Renaissance, to value images of the biblical past, historical record, and images of universal values and truths via metaphor. Turning instead to the banalities and fleeting moments of everyday life, in all of its messiness, incompleteness, and contingency, the role of artists as it emerged under the modern and avant-garde movements of the late 19th and early 20th centuries was less about being the purveyor of some kind of “truth” via their representations, and more about complicating and even calling into question the possibility of ever seeing or representing the complete world one sees with their eyes.

The flatness, stark colour contrasts, and often incomplete visions of Ukiyo-e prints provided one of the important influences to modern artists of the late 19th century who attempted to work out a new way to make the images Baudelaire was calling for. Turning, for example, to artists such as Edouard Manet, Mary Cassatt, Vincent Van Gogh, and Henri de Toulouse-Lautrec (see image comparisons below), we can see the influence of Ukiyo-e prints in the way content and form shifts in these artists works away from more traditional, figurative, and mimetic representations, towards the flat, divided, and unmodulated colour palettes of the Japanese. As I tell my students, new ways of making art cannot come out of a vacuum, and we now know that these artists were very much studying the work of Japanese printmakers when formulating new directions for their art practice.

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It was with this rich context in place that I planned a visit to one of the most important museums and workshops of Ukiyo-e printmaking in Japan, the Hiroshige Museum of Art in Shizuoka City not far from the famed Mount Fuji, on the south coast of Japan. At the museum, which houses one of the largest collections of Utagawa Hiroshige’s prints, I was able to finally view a wide range of Ukiyo-e prints in both painted and printed form, and learn much more about the printmaking process that effectively placed affordable artworks in the homes of Japanese people for several centuries. At the time of my visit, there was a special exhibition of Ukiyo-e prints from the early 19th century depicting samurai and geisha entertainment culture that would further influence later artists of the era the Impressionists would be looking at (see my photographs below). We were also able to see side by side comparisons of Japanese prints and Van Gogh works where the undeniable influences and even borrowing were apparent. Finally, the museum also encouraged visitors to dress up and perform as subjects in their own virtual Ukiyo-e print, complete with kimonos and a well lit space suitable for photographing and sharing. As one of the guides told me, it was the intention of the museum to encourage active participation in a visual culture that gave visibility to everyday people and their lives.

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Another fascinating section of the museum was the exhibition of contemporary art works influenced by Ukiyo-e print culture. Notable among them were the work of two UK artists. The first artist, Emily Allchurch, uses photographic collage to rework one of Hiroshige’s famous prints of Mount Fuji in Tokaido Road (2013), while the second artist, Carl Randall, and his work titled Mihni no Matsubara (2016), depicts crowds of selfie-taking young people and tourists, a contemporary subject matter, explored through the formal conventions of oil painting. I enjoyed examining these works up close and seeing how the museum made space for contemporary art works such as these to continue the conversation linking Ukiyo-e print culture to a global modern world with its fascination for the ephemeral, the urban, and the everyday. 

Before leaving the museum, we learned that in the coming week a new exhibition featuring world famous Japanese-street artist Lady AIKO was set to open, featuring collaboration with onsite craftsmen to produce an original woodcut. I cannot express how sad I was to miss this amazing show. Later, the museum was kind enough to send me the press package for the exhibition titled LADY GO! AIKO x EDO Girls Collection that included the following description:

“Hiroshige Museum of Art meets globally active street artist, AIKO, for the first collaboration
ever! A collection of works representing the unique world of contemporary Eshi, AIKO, and
Ukiyo-e that feature women depicted by Utagawa-style Eshi including Hiroshige, Toyokuni
III, and Kuniyoshi will be featured at this exhibition. Highlighted works we may feel casually
familiar with include a giant wall art by AIKO exhibited for the first time in Japan, “America
no Yume”, which is created with techniques of Ukiyo-e Hanga, and Edo girls fashion that
appear in Ukiyo-e of the Tōkaidō and Kabuki. We hope you enjoy the world of “Girls” loved
by many generations of the Edo period to today."
The vivid poster for the Lady AIKO collaborative exhibition on this spring at the Hirsohige Museum of Art.

The vivid poster for the Lady AIKO collaborative exhibition on this spring at the Hirsohige Museum of Art.

The show features two large rooms including one featuring prints from the collection displaying the life of girls depicted in Ukiyo-e prints, and the second room with the large scale mural The Tale of Mr. Skull and Mermaids (at the top of this page)—a work that AIKO first showed in Brooklyn, inspired by the intersection of “pop culture” of the Edo period and that of contemporary New York—and the original woodcut AIKO created with the museum titled American Dreams (featured in the above poster). I hope one day to see this work in person as well (Japan, I will be back!) but it is clear that the legacy of Ukiyo-e lives on in the way that the medium was clearly intended.

Further Reading:

Guth, M.E. Alicia Volk, and Emiko Yamanashi. Japan and Paris: Impressionism, Postimpressionism, and the Modern Era. Essays by Christine Honolulu Academy of Arts, Honolulu, 2004. 

Morse, Anne Nishimura, Shūgō Asano, and Museum of Fine Arts, Boston. Drama and Desire: Japanese Paintings from the Floating World, 1690-1850. 1st ed. Boston: Museum of Fine Arts, Boston, 2007.

Tinios, Ellis and British Museum. Japanese Prints: Ukiyo-e in Edo, 1700-1900. Burlington, VT: Lund Humphries, 2010.

Comment
J. Paul Getty III, grandson of oil tycoon and art collector J. Paul Getty has been the subject of a recent movie and now a television docudrama based on his 1970's kidnapping and ransom. The story is an eye-opening look inside both the art world and…

J. Paul Getty III, grandson of oil tycoon and art collector J. Paul Getty has been the subject of a recent movie and now a television docudrama based on his 1970's kidnapping and ransom. The story is an eye-opening look inside both the art world and the world of the ultra wealthy. Photographer unknown, c. 1970.

Weekly Flipboard Links and Media Round Up

April 08, 2018

We are finally back from our whirlwind travels through China and Japan, a trip that exceeded all expectations! In the coming weeks, I will be dedicating some posts on some specific art and architecture related topics related to my visit, but I wanted to bookend this week's round-up with a look at Art Basel Hong Kong, an event that I sadly missed by only a few days but shaped much of the art world conversation at precisely the moment I was on this trip. In fact, it is notable if you look at the Instagram feeds of many of the art world types I recommended in a recent post how many of them are touring major Asian cities since late March to survey the evolving art scene. I highlight @thingsizzyloves account in particular, as she has been posting spectacular art images this past week from Japan-- a place that I also sought to feature on my own feed as much as possible.  

The other benefit of the long journey to Asia was that I was finally able to catch up on many movies and television shows that I had held in reserve for the air travel. At the top of my list was Call Me By Your Name and Lady Bird, two beautiful films I had missed at VIFF, and All The Money in the World, a movie I have been wanting to see for some time since it follows the story of art collector J. Paul Getty and the kidnapping of his grandson in the 1970s. This is a story I had only heard about in passing, and being a huge fan of the Getty Institute and collection in LA, the story ended up blowing me away for lifting the veil on the corruption and ugly reality of the senior Getty. Without spoiling the movie and new television series Trust (debuting tonight on FX) and also based on the Getty story, suffice it to say that anyone interested in Getty's museums, art collections, and overall legacy will learn a great deal about the real story behind the man and the family. Eye-opening on every level, and an important part of the larger conversation regarding the intersection of art and the ultra wealthy. Enjoy this week's links and I will be back soon with some posts related to my Asia trip!

"Spotlight on… Art Central in Hong Kong"
"Spotlight on… Art Central in Hong Kong"

theartnewspaper.com

"How Corporations Harness — and Hijack — the Idea of the Museum"
"How Corporations Harness — and Hijack — the Idea of the Museum"

hyperallergic.com

"What’s Your Favorite Color? With Art Palette, Google Hopes to Repeat the Success of Its Viral Face-Matching App"
"What’s Your Favorite Color? With Art Palette, Google Hopes to Repeat the Success of Its Viral Face-Matching App"

artnet.com

"What About the Breakfast Club? Revisiting the Movies Of My Youth In the Age Of #MeToo"
"What About the Breakfast Club? Revisiting the Movies Of My Youth In the Age Of #MeToo"

newyorker.com

"Unknown or Unreal? The Shadow on Some Russian Avant-Garde Art"
"Unknown or Unreal? The Shadow on Some Russian Avant-Garde Art"

nytimes.com

"Judge Throws Out Closely Watched Lawsuit Against the Agnes Martin Authentication Committee"
"Judge Throws Out Closely Watched Lawsuit Against the Agnes Martin Authentication Committee"

artnet.com

"Why the Artist Who Created Erica Haskard’s Artwork Loves The Americans’ Fictional Painter"
"Why the Artist Who Created Erica Haskard’s Artwork Loves The Americans’ Fictional Painter"

slate.com

"Impressions of Art Basel in Hong Kong (VIDEO)"
"Impressions of Art Basel in Hong Kong (VIDEO)"

ArtBasel

"Forgotten Feminisms: An Appeal Against ‘Domestic Despotism’"
"Forgotten Feminisms: An Appeal Against ‘Domestic Despotism’"

nybooks.com

"Adrian Piper: A Synthesis of Intuitions, 1965–2016 | MoMA LIVE (VIDEO)"
"Adrian Piper: A Synthesis of Intuitions, 1965–2016 | MoMA LIVE (VIDEO)"

moma

"Spotlight on… Art Central in Hong Kong" "How Corporations Harness — and Hijack — the Idea of the Museum" "What’s Your Favorite Color? With Art Palette, Google Hopes to Repeat the Success of Its Viral Face-Matching App" "What About the Breakfast Club? Revisiting the Movies Of My Youth In the Age Of #MeToo" "Unknown or Unreal? The Shadow on Some Russian Avant-Garde Art" "Judge Throws Out Closely Watched Lawsuit Against the Agnes Martin Authentication Committee" "Why the Artist Who Created Erica Haskard’s Artwork Loves The Americans’ Fictional Painter" "Impressions of Art Basel in Hong Kong (VIDEO)" "Forgotten Feminisms: An Appeal Against ‘Domestic Despotism’" "Adrian Piper: A Synthesis of Intuitions, 1965–2016 | MoMA LIVE (VIDEO)"
  • Spotlight on… Art Central in Hong Kong
  • How Corporations Harness — and Hijack — the Idea of the Museum
  • What’s Your Favorite Color? With Art Palette, Google Hopes to Repeat the Success of Its Viral Face-Matching App
  • What About the Breakfast Club? Revisiting the Movies Of My Youth In the Age Of #MeToo
  • Unknown or Unreal? The Shadow on Some Russian Avant-Garde Art
  • Judge Throws Out Closely Watched Lawsuit Against the Agnes Martin Authentication Committee
  • Why the Artist Who Created Erica Haskard’s Artwork Loves The Americans’ Fictional Painter (PODCAST)
  • Forgotten Feminisms: An Appeal Against ‘Domestic Despotism’
  • Adrian Piper: A Synthesis of Intuitions, 1965–2016 | MoMA LIVE (VIDEO)
  • Impressions of Art Basel in Hong Kong (VIDEO)
Comment
Detail from Banksy's new mural that appeared in New York this past week depicting the imprisonment of Turkish journalist Zehra Doğan.

Detail from Banksy's new mural that appeared in New York this past week depicting the imprisonment of Turkish journalist Zehra Doğan.

Weekly Flipboard Links and Media Round Up

March 18, 2018

As I post my weekly round-up, we are boarding a plane to embark on a whirlwind Asia trip with stops in Hong Kong, Xiamen, Shanghai, Beijing, Hakata, Kyoto, Shimizu and Tokyo-- a trip that has been in the works for almost a year, and one that I have been looking forward to and eagerly anticipating from the moment it was finalized. As it will be our first visit to China and Japan, I have been diligently researching the urban scene in each of our stops and enjoying the opportunity to learn more about the contemporary art scene we hope to glimpse while on the ground. Japan, in particular, has been at the very top of my travel bucket list for years and was the catalyst for this trip. Japan is a place that I have long wanted to visit for a million reasons related to the modern design, visual and urban culture, architecture, fashion, and the strong emphasis on everyday aesthetics the Japanese are famous for. I have also spent time studying the influence of Japanese art on developments in European modernism, so I am particularly excited for this leg of our journey. 

China was a later addition to this trip, and it is a place that I am admittedly fascinated by but also deeply ambivalent about. As a teenager in 1989, watching the Tiananmen Square protests and aftermath on TV in the same year as the fall of the Berlin Wall was both a life altering and critical turning point in my life. Looking back, I can mark this time as especially pivotal in how I eventually came to understand my own activism, research interests in the avant-garde, and the strong beliefs I formed in upholding liberalism, human rights, freedom of speech, and the role of artists, activists, and journalists in civil society. Over the years, I have been fortunate to have many students from China in my classroom, all urging me to see the country for myself, and to separate out the current politics from the long-standing culture and history that shapes the nation. At the same time, I have had students and friends from Hong Kong openly sharing how the city has been impacted since the handover to China in 1997 and describing how distinct and special the people of Hong Kong are. I have much to see and I am beyond excited to start this journey with an open mind and an open heart, and look forward to sharing what I see in the weeks to come. Enjoy the links, and happy Spring Break!

"Why Fewer Galleries Are Opening Today Than 10 Years Ago"
"Why Fewer Galleries Are Opening Today Than 10 Years Ago"

artsy.net

"Can Inclusion Riders Change Hollywood?"
"Can Inclusion Riders Change Hollywood?"

theatlantic.com

"Activists Pressure Louvre to Drop Oil Company Sponsorship with Die-in"
"Activists Pressure Louvre to Drop Oil Company Sponsorship with Die-in"

hyperallergic.com

"Zaha Hadid’s Desert Think Tank: Environmental Beauty and Efficiency"
"Zaha Hadid’s Desert Think Tank: Environmental Beauty and Efficiency"

nytimes.com

"Banksy protests Turkish artist's incarceration in new mural"
"Banksy protests Turkish artist's incarceration in new mural"

cnn.com

"No. 72: The Delectable, Daring World of Cake Art (PODCAST)"
"No. 72: The Delectable, Daring World of Cake Art (PODCAST)"

artsy.com

"Hustle & Ho, Sex Workers Festival of Resistance "
"Hustle & Ho, Sex Workers Festival of Resistance "

artforum.com

"The mirage of riches in museums’ vaults"
"The mirage of riches in museums’ vaults"

theartnewspaper.com

"Firing of MOCA's chief curator triggers worry over the future of an artist-centric museum"
"Firing of MOCA's chief curator triggers worry over the future of an artist-centric museum"

latimes.com

"Bruce Nauman: Disappearing Acts / Retrospective at Schaulager Basel (VIDEO)"
"Bruce Nauman: Disappearing Acts / Retrospective at Schaulager Basel (VIDEO)"

vernissage

"Why Fewer Galleries Are Opening Today Than 10 Years Ago" "Can Inclusion Riders Change Hollywood?" "Activists Pressure Louvre to Drop Oil Company Sponsorship with Die-in" "Zaha Hadid’s Desert Think Tank: Environmental Beauty and Efficiency" "Banksy protests Turkish artist's incarceration in new mural" "No. 72: The Delectable, Daring World of Cake Art (PODCAST)" "Hustle & Ho, Sex Workers Festival of Resistance " "The mirage of riches in museums’ vaults" "Firing of MOCA's chief curator triggers worry over the future of an artist-centric museum" "Bruce Nauman: Disappearing Acts / Retrospective at Schaulager Basel (VIDEO)"
  • Why Fewer Galleries Are Opening Today Than 10 Years Ago
  • Can Inclusion Riders Change Hollywood?
  • Activists Pressure Louvre to Drop Oil Company Sponsorship with Die-in
  • Zaha Hadid’s Desert Think Tank: Environmental Beauty and Efficiency
  • Banksy protests Turkish artist's incarceration in new mural
  • No. 72: The Delectable, Daring World of Cake Art (PODCAST)
  • The mirage of riches in museums’ vaults
  • Firing of MOCA's chief curator triggers worry over the future of an artist-centric museum
  • Hustle & Ho, Sex Workers Festival of Resistance
  • Bruce Nauman: Disappearing Acts / Retrospective at Schaulager Basel (VIDEO)
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Jasper Johns Target paintings (1961) on exhibition at an artist retrospective of Johns' career at The Broad in Los Angeles (image: D Barenscott Instagram)

Jasper Johns Target paintings (1961) on exhibition at an artist retrospective of Johns' career at The Broad in Los Angeles (image: D Barenscott Instagram)

Jasper Johns and Some Thoughts on Artist Retrospectives

March 14, 2018

Last month when I visited the Takashi Murakami exhibition at the Vancouver Art Gallery, I mentioned how retrospective exhibitions were among my favourite type of art show.  Perhaps it is the historian in me, or the interest I have had since I was a young kid in reading biographies of famous people, but I find something deeply resonant in seeing the lifework of an artist curated in a dedicated space. Not to be mistaken, retrospectives are admittedly among the most romanticized and least critical of all art exhibition types. They are seductive in their visual storytelling, positioning the artist as hero-genius in the isolated white cube, and shamelessly appealing to that part of us that wants the short-cut version of an artist’s career.

Retrospectives follow a long tradition in the history of art that sought to distinguish and elevate particular individuals into the canon of art history. Originally exclusive affairs with limited audience, retrospectives were made more commercial and mainstream in the late nineteenth century as part of the rise of World’s Exhibitions. Importantly, the move grew out of an interest by the state in nationalizing and even laying claim to particular artist movements and traditions, yet by the early twentieth century, sprawling retrospective exhibitions also existed to attract larger audiences, and potential buyers, to the new “modern art” of the era. Important retrospectives (what we would call “blockbuster” shows) held across Europe at this time, of artists such as Gauguin, Cezanne, Van Gogh, Seurat, and Matisse, helped to inspire new generations of artists and educate the public through a survey of carefully selected works meant to represent the individual artist’s oeuvre.

As art historian Robert Jensen argues in his study Marketing Modernism in Fin-de-Siècle Europe (Princeton University Press, 1996): “after 1900 the retrospective was widely and self-consciously employed as a weapon to redress the exclusions of the past, to rewrite history, to construct a canonical history of modernist artists as a sequence of great individuals in the evolution of modern art.” Ironically, the era of retrospectives, which began as a way to recognize artists on the margins of the art world, and in post-WWII would act as important cultural exports in the name of liberal democracy linking modern art with open societies, continues today with many problematic dimensions, exclusions, and the aura of privilege. For these reasons, it is always important to approach the retrospective with both healthy scepticism and an understanding of the larger contexts at play.

Case in point-- while in Los Angeles, I visited the Jasper Johns exhibition “Something Resembling Truth” at The Broad (click on selected image gallery below to view individual works and titles). This was a retrospective that was co-organized with the prestigious Royal Academy of Arts in London, where it was first on display through the fall of last year. Jasper Johns, an American painter, sculptor, and artist (associated with the Neo-Dada and pop art movements of the 1960’s), who is today 87 years old and regarded by many as among the most important living artists in North America, was chosen for a retrospective by a curator and art historian duo in London who had been working on publishing and releasing a five-volume academic catalogue on Johns. The Los Angeles contingent organizing the show was headed by The Broad’s founding director, and the Jasper Johns show would be part of the private museum’s programming, helping to raise the profile of the brand new art institution in the eyes of the art world. In short, the Jasper Johns retrospective does one kind of job in England, and an entirely different kind of job in the U.S.

View fullsize Entrance to the exhibition
View fullsize Three Flags (1958)
View fullsize The Critic Sees (1961-2)
View fullsize Field Painting (1963-4)
View fullsize Souvenir (1964)
View fullsize Painting With Two Balls (1960)

In London, the venue for the retrospective, in one of the cities oldest and most venerated art spaces, was presumably staged to showcase the research of the curator and art historian organizers. Still, the show was met with much less enthusiasm as one might expect. Seeing all of John’s famous American flag works was likely unsettling to a British public coming to terms with the Trump era, and was once again a reminder of the art historical narrative and mythology surrounding what Jason Farago in the New York Review of Books termed “the primacy of American art as the postwar successor to European modernism.” In sharp contrast, as I noted when I was in L.A. after seeing the tremendous marketing machine promoting the Johns show all over the city, there was a very different way that the Johns show was being used to attract a new kind of crowd to the local art scene. In L.A., Johns was positioned as both retro and sexy—a recycled version of an American art legend in a city that venerates heroes and everything shiny and “new.” As Catherine Wagley aptly described in an artnet review:

“The exhibition may indeed be particularly illuminating for younger Angelenos, who, even if they visit museums regularly would rarely see Johns paintings (LACMA and MOCA mostly own prints). It’s seductively installed, lit to make colors pop. The aspiring painter can, and should, geek out over Johns’s surface texture, trompe l’oeil, and material competence. But the Broad, with its ahistorical hanging, does to Johns what it usually does to art: privileges objects over context. Hopefully viewers will be beguiled enough to learn on their own how deftly Johns’s work spoke and responded to his political and aesthetic milieu.”

In the case of the artist himself, Jasper Johns had very little to no input in the staging of the retrospective. Reading a longer New York Times article on Johns by Deborah Solomon ahead of my trip, it was interesting to learn how little the interpretation of his legacy mattered to the artist: “Mr. Johns himself is loath to offer biographical interpretations of his work — or any interpretations, for that matter. He is famously elusive and his humor tends toward the sardonic. He once joked that, of the dozens of books that have been written about his art, his favorite one was written in Japanese. What he liked is that he could not understand it.” In fact, the important lesson in understanding the wider context of this and many other retrospectives, is how little the artist’s actual lived experience or interpretations figure into what one sees. Retrospectives, like many other kinds of storytelling devices, say more about the culture that produces them than the subject under examination.

 

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Ruth Asawa, Spring (1965). Artist, activist, and art education advocate Ruth Asawa learned to draw and paint as a child in the Japanese internment camps during WWII. 

Ruth Asawa, Spring (1965). Artist, activist, and art education advocate Ruth Asawa learned to draw and paint as a child in the Japanese internment camps during WWII. 

Weekly Flipboard Links and Media Round Up

March 11, 2018

As spring is just around the corner, the art world's attention has shifted this week to New York where Armory Arts Week opened to kick off the 2018 art season. With over 200 exhibitors representing international galleries, artist collectives, and public art programs, the Armory show often sets the tone for what can be expected in terms of themes, issues, and yes, fashion and taste, for the year to come. This year, mirroring my own experience at the College Arts Association conference in LA last month, the event has been overshadowed in many important, but also cynical (and some would argue potentially destructive) ways, by the spectre of the Trump administration and the abject fear of how shifting US government policies may impact art activism and the role art can play in speaking truth to power.

At a time when the art market is once again breaking records (as it did this same week at the Sotheby's auction in London), there is the everpresent disconnect between art valuations and the value of subversive thought that underpins many of the works at auction. Still, one of the ironies of the overheated art market is renewed focus and attention that is being paid to artists who have often fallen just off the radar of conventional art histories. Case in point is my artist in focus this week, Ruth Asawa.

Artist, activist, and art education advocate Ruth Asawa learned to draw and paint as a child in the Japanese internment camps during WWII. She would go on to challenge visual arts boundaries and make her unique mark in the American art scene. I highly recommend a recent New Yorker article that touches on her important legacy and body of work within the context of a recent commercial art exhibition promoting her works for sale:

"The addition of Asawa to art’s overwhelmingly white-male hit parade comes at a critical time in our country, as the policies of the current Administration challenge the undeniable fact that the United States is a nation of immigrants. Asawa’s parents were farmers, who emigrated to rural California from Japan. (“Sculpture is like farming,” the artist once said. “If you just keep at it, you can get quite a lot done.”)"

Enjoy this week's links, and get out into that spring sunshine!

"Someone Yarn-Bombed a Guggenheim Museum Toilet with Gold Crochet"
"Someone Yarn-Bombed a Guggenheim Museum Toilet with Gold Crochet"

hyperallergic.com

"Ai Weiwei Will Make the Refugee Crisis Personal in His Upcoming Qatar Show"
"Ai Weiwei Will Make the Refugee Crisis Personal in His Upcoming Qatar Show"

artnet.com

"Jean-Luc Godard’s Models for a Scuttled Exhibition Are Artworks in Their Own Right"
"Jean-Luc Godard’s Models for a Scuttled Exhibition Are Artworks in Their Own Right"

hyperallergic.com

"How the 1913 Armory Show Dispelled the Belief that Good Art Had to Be Beautiful"
"How the 1913 Armory Show Dispelled the Belief that Good Art Had to Be Beautiful"

artsy.net

"A Flag Is a Flag Is a Flag"
"A Flag Is a Flag Is a Flag"

nybooks.com

"New Adventures in Old Masters: How Art Historical Detective Work Gives Dealers at TEFAF an Edge"
"New Adventures in Old Masters: How Art Historical Detective Work Gives Dealers at TEFAF an Edge"

artnet.com

"What Is the Perfect Color Worth?"
"What Is the Perfect Color Worth?"

nytimes.com

"The Handmaid's Tale costume designer Ane Crabtree on the feminist power of fashion (PODCAST)"
"The Handmaid's Tale costume designer Ane Crabtree on the feminist power of fashion (PODCAST)"

cbc.ca

"Identifying art through machine learning with the MoMA #GoogleArts (VIDEO)"
"Identifying art through machine learning with the MoMA #GoogleArts (VIDEO)"

googlearts

"The Spring Break Art Show: A Good Time Show Disrupted by the Specter of Trump (PODCAST)"
"The Spring Break Art Show: A Good Time Show Disrupted by the Specter of Trump (PODCAST)"

explainme

"Someone Yarn-Bombed a Guggenheim Museum Toilet with Gold Crochet" "Ai Weiwei Will Make the Refugee Crisis Personal in His Upcoming Qatar Show" "Jean-Luc Godard’s Models for a Scuttled Exhibition Are Artworks in Their Own Right" "How the 1913 Armory Show Dispelled the Belief that Good Art Had to Be Beautiful" "A Flag Is a Flag Is a Flag" "New Adventures in Old Masters: How Art Historical Detective Work Gives Dealers at TEFAF an Edge" "What Is the Perfect Color Worth?" "The Handmaid's Tale costume designer Ane Crabtree on the feminist power of fashion (PODCAST)" "Identifying art through machine learning with the MoMA #GoogleArts (VIDEO)" "The Spring Break Art Show: A Good Time Show Disrupted by the Specter of Trump (PODCAST)"
  • Someone Yarn-Bombed a Guggenheim Museum Toilet with Gold Crochet
  • Ai Weiwei Will Make the Refugee Crisis Personal in His Upcoming Qatar Show
  • Jean-Luc Godard’s Models for a Scuttled Exhibition Are Artworks in Their Own Right
  • How the 1913 Armory Show Dispelled the Belief that Good Art Had to Be Beautiful
  • A Flag Is a Flag Is a Flag
  • New Adventures in Old Masters: How Art Historical Detective Work Gives Dealers at TEFAF an Edge
  • What Is the Perfect Color Worth?
  • The Handmaid's Tale costume designer Ane Crabtree on the feminist power of fashion (PODCAST)
  • The Spring Break Art Show: A Good Time Show Disrupted by the Specter of Trump (PODCAST)
  • Identifying art through machine learning with the MoMA #GoogleArts (VIDEO)

 

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© Dorothy Barenscott, 2010-2025