
INDIGO STRIPES #2

On Indigo Stripes
by David Arthur
Walters
Arteworlde Kritika
I have torn through the blue lampshade of
color limitations, and came out into the white; after me, comrade aviators sail
into the chasm - I have set up the semaphores of Suprematism. Kasimir Malevich (1919)
Babette Herschberger's Indigo
Stripes #2 took the $5,000 Second Prize in the 2005 "art and the city"competition at ArtCenter/South Florida on Miami Beach's chic Lincoln Road
Mall. The competition was sponsored by Artecity, a $100 million condominium
development located a few blocks from the ArtCenter colony, in the South Beach
Art District at the newly designated "Collins Park Cultural Center"
in and around historic Collins Park. The Artecity project is representative of
the burgeoning "art-industrial" complex. A triumvirate of Artecity
developers have allied themselves with financial resources, politicians, and
several cultural institutions, in hopes that arte will serve to sizzle real
estate sales and renovate the blighted district.
Herschberger's horizontal Indigo Stripes are
painted on a 54 x 48 x 2.75 inch wood panel. The indigo color is
black-and-blue, the coal-tar black showing through as 'background'. Five of the
indigo stripes are relatively broad and cover most of the panel. Most of the
indigo stripes are separated by slightly irregular, narrow white lines, giving
the appearance of clothes lines or barbed wire. Two or three broader but still
relatively narrow, almost pitch black stripes - "black cracks" in the
indigo - also divide the indigo swaths. Small white blotches, perhaps
starlight, appear in or near the dividing lines, while other slightly larger
white blotches appear elsewhere, giving the illusion of tiny figures such as a
crawling baby and Elsie the Cow.
The cover of Artecity's excellent brochure - a small poster folded in twelves, arranged to display the contest entries - imitates Indigo Stripes. It is a blue-black photograph of a condominium compound, over which is printed in brilliant white, "art and the city."
I happen to be allergic to synthetic indigo dye, which is
derived from coal tar. My experience with two pairs of jeans, which I tried to
tolerate by washing them in bleach a dozen times, usually causes me to
associate indigo with furious itching. If I do not check myself, I
automatically start scratching my crotch when I see indigo. Yet Indigo Stripes'
weighty wall of black-and-blue boards suppressed that reaction because, I
suppose, the color as well as the horizontal plane suggests the very extremity
of repose, grave depression, bordering on the dead weight of death, beyond
which the deceased is weightless.
Of course weightlessness was the subjective objective
of the Russian avant-garde painters after the grave
catastrophe of the Great War. Artists were especially fascinated by the fly
machines and the possibility of flight beyond the blue sky, where they supposed
the navigator would be greeted by the white light of the Sun. Cosmic
consciousness would have to do until then. In fact, they believed that their
supreme art, or art in its highest manifestations, was the sole path to cosmic
consciousness and to the eventual realization of utopia. Later on, Milan
Kundera wrote a novel about 'The Unbearable Lightness of Being' in
one utopia:
"The heaviest of burdens is therefore simultaneously an
image of life's most intense fulfillment. The heavier the burden, the closer
our lives come to earth, the more real and truthful they become. Conversely,
the absolute absence of a burden causes man to be lighter than air, to soar
into the heights, take leave of the earth and his earthly being, and become
half real, his movements as free as they are insignificant.... Which one is
positive, weight or lightness? Parmenides responded: lightness is positive,
weight is negative. Was he correct or not? That is the question. The only
certainty is: the lightness/weight opposition is the most mysterious, most
ambiguous of all."
That question is perhaps another form of what Camus thought was
the most important question of modern times: "To be or not to be?" As
far as Freud was privately concerned, anyone who seriously asked that question
was insane - psychiatry soon became a booming business. Although we usually
elect gravity instead of weightlessness, our self-contradictory dialectic or
"progress", as developing children and as civilization, is from the concrete
to the abstract. Those who do not believe the ideal is real might say that
death is the final destination of both philosophies; at which time the psyche
is released from its concentration camp into the weightlessness of
nonexistence. In between distracting bites and images, we have occasion to
doubt whether or not our increasingly symbolic life, un-tethered as it is from
planet earth, is a real as we want it to be. But at least we are free, or so we
panoptic beings believe as we lock ourselves in our modern caves. The next day,
as the turkey vultures circle over head, we behold the grand federal prison in
downtown Miami If it were not for its narrow windows, tourists might believe
the prison to be a postmodern condominium compound. I need more space.
"Indigo Stripes brings to mind a concentration
camp scene," I casually remarked to an ArtCenter associate artist. "I
am standing inside a barbed wire fence in the dark blue of deep winter dusk.
Two blurry stars beckon to me, but I cannot crawl through the black
cracks."
"I don't talk about those things," said the associate
haughtily. "Everybody has their own opinions, and it is useless to discuss
such things. I like everybody's art. Goodbye." Case dismissed, and me
along with it.
Of course an honest description of my psychological reaction
to Indigo Stripes is not intended to insult the artist or her
colony. I know nothing of her except her paintings - I suppose they are, to a
certain extent, self-portraits, just as this is a snapshot of me. Nor are my
remarks meant to be art criticism. Nor did I intend the can of paint I threw up
against the wall of a garage when I was a juvenile delinquent to be a work of
fine art. Nor should any one imply that I by any means mean to say that Indigo
Stripes is not art at all. In my lay opinion it is art. The work
brings other artists to mind; off hand: Clyfford Still and Barnett Newman, and
the Color Fielders, Larry Poons and Jules Olitsky.
I do not have the faintest idea of the artist's intentions
for Indigo Stripes, or what she had in mind when she painted it.
For all I know, she thought her lines were alive and superior, say, to fish
swimming in the deep blue sea. After all, Wassily Kandinsky, writing from Paris
in 1935, said:
"I see no essential difference between a line one calls
'abstract' and a fish, but rather an essential likeness, The isolated line and
the isolated fish alike are living beings with forces peculiar to them.... It
is the environment of the line and the fish that brings about a miracle.... The
environment is the composition.... But approaching it in another way, there is
an essential difference between a line and a fish. And that is that the fish
can swim, eat, and be eaten. It has, then, capacities of which the line is
deprived. These capacities of the fish are necessary extras for the fish itself
and for the kitchen, but not for painting. And so, not being necessary, they
are superfluous. That is why I like the line better than the fish - at least in
my painting."
However that might be, I suppose Babette paints because that is
what she really likes to do. Wherefore she does it conscientiously; that is,
she paints instead of doing something else. I opine that she requires no verbal
crutches during the production process. I presume she feels the things she
painted, that she has feelings which she has no need to give mouth to, except
perhaps as advertisements to stimulate demand.
Yes, again, Indigo Stripes might be her
self-portrait at the time, as if she were imprisoned by the work if she was not
the work itself. Indeed, Wassily Kandinsky (1866-1944) once said that an
abstract composition has a "soul", a soul dependent upon the
integrity of the artist. In any event, I feel Hershberger felt the painting was
finished at one point, at which time she submitted it for judgment. Finally, to
divine her feelings in this matter, if feeling is to be the universal principle
of aesthetics, I think I would have to close my eyes, rub my face and hands
over Indigo Stripes, smell it, lick it, chip off some paint and
taste it, sleep on top of it one night and under it the next.
By the way, and this is of no small moment in the historical
context, I am informed by an ArtCenter staff member that Hershberger
complimented my verbal art: in an email to the director of ArtCenter, she
called one of my linguistic portraits "crazy". Conversely, there was
a time when abstract works such as Indigo Stripes were called
"crazy" because they did not clearly represent anything in
particular, nor anything of universal import, for that matter, except modern
dissolution, decadence, subjective individualism, unwholesomeness or insanity.
The modern distemper and malaise or malease (bad ease) was
lamented on at length by the French conservative Rene Guenon in Crisis
of the Modern World (1927). As far as he was concerned, the modern
degeneration originated in the West with the repudiation of traditional
society. Hence the West is gradually corrupting the rest of the globe,
fanatically imposing its version of freedom on the world whether the world likes
it or not. Of course the dissolution is according to Hoyle; or rather according
to the Hindu texts which outline the regression from the Golden Age to the last
stage of the Iron or Dark Age, now enjoyed by de-spiritualized consumers.
To paraphrase our frustrated French guru: Although wisdom and
practice, knowledge and activity, are complementary when in harmonious
equilibrium, the West has abandoned contemplation for incessant action. That is
why a Hindu Brahmana observed that there were only a handful of Brahmanas in
the United States among a multitude of Kshtrayas (warriors). Action, ceaseless
change without contrasting permanence, competition, and war are dominant in the
West. Analytical, divisive, head-in-sand thinking; infinite division of labor
into meaningless functions; disintegrative multiplicity and atomizing
individualism; - dominate the final imperial civilization ruled by the dark
forces of corporate-board tribalism. The Western culture has reduced itself to
worshiping the absurd in its mindless pursuit of temporal happiness. The
sciences are divorced from morality: the higher the technology, the lower the
moral standards. Religion is degraded to commodity fetish and its abstract
one-god, Money. Wherefore ceaseless change, perpetual innovation and the like
are idolized by the West, pursuant to its scientific-industrial revolution. In
art, the plastic art called Action Painting helped blaze the path to general
instability.
Many neo-Kantian pioneers of abstract modern art, dissatisfied
as they were with the bourgeois materialism of their disciplined therefore
self-hating caste, and ignoring Kant's precautions about the illusions inherent
in transcendental dialectic, thought their path led to the absolute
transcendence of mind over matter. Ironically, they become anti-intellectuals,
replacing mind with irrational feelings. In other words, they thought
sensational intuition was divine intuition. Alas, after God was assassinated
with Nature's laws, Nature herself was denuded and de-spiritualized; existentialist
Man proclaimed the absurdity of his world, and soon realized that the
assassination of the projected social god has led to his own nothingness. God
is dead. Nature is dead. Existence is dead.
Everything is permitted. Everything is
absurd. Everybody is deaf. Never mind. Nothing matters.
That sort of craziness, sometimes unwittingly represented in
contemporary abstract art, is no longer called crazy. Modern art is traditional
now, and even conservative in the context of fleeting contemporary art. Any
sort of coherent verbal expression purporting to be truthful or even artful in
its finest sense is deemed to be insulting and crazy and is promptly denounced
as incipient fanaticism which might lead to concentration camps and ovens if
not hard labor in prisons.
Artists, at least, are supposed to be absolutely free, and those
who really believe that are often the hungriest of their lot. The great
Kandinsky had his conservative reservations on the account of freedom. He said
abstract art should not be completely divorced from nature (of which we are a
part) lest the result be merely decorative, "like a rug or necktie".
Yet, in the final analysis, Kandinsky declared the artist to be, essentially,
absolutely free, period; so there, take that.
After all (we interject for good measure) the various
ideological "isms", even the "Artistic Urbanism" of
post-modern Miami Beach's Artecity, are methodological antitheses of truly
creative art.
We should feel free to think about art no matter how we feel,
for gross sensate feeling is not all there is to being human. Perception is not
mere sensation: perception is sensation judged. Emotion is not just feeling:
although the feeling side is on top, there are two sides to the coin of
emotion: feeling and thought. And if we would have the truth about the number
of senses, the brain is a sense organ too, and thinking itself, no matter how
abstract, is fine feeling, is "sublime" feeling. So the divorce of
feeling from thought is a false dichotomy although convenient to some ends.
Without associated thought, an abstract painting, no matter how much
"feeling" is incorporated - especially nonsensical "pure
feeling" - cannot exceed decoration.
Piet Mondrian said as much in reverse when he observed that the
new, "flat" paintings are not decorative when they allude to things
"much more inward" - Indigo Stripes, from my perspective,
has depth. The critical dissociation of art from thinking is a shallow and
superficial way of thinking. In fact, to get and to hold an appreciative
public, modern artists have felt obliged to explain works that might otherwise
appear to be absurd or meaningless. Manifestos and other formal statements have
been composed to that end, many of them, in accord with the times, incoherent
or absurd.
An artist at ArtCenter filled me in on the contemporary elements
of art, "new" elements which are allegedly replacing the
"old" elements of color, line, and form - incidentally, Indigo
Stripes has color, line, and form.
"The successful ArtCenter artist must have three
things," he said, "a concept, a medium, and blah-blah-blah."
"Well," I responded, "the blah-blah-blah is not
so good, it gives me the blahs. I think artists should hire artistic thinkers
and writers. That would enable them to devote themselves to what they do
best."
But no, the art of rhetoric is denied artistic status nowadays.
People like their writing in the flat nowadays, like newsprint and newspeak;
impersonal, as if it were true. Emotion must be avoided: meaning moral values
should e out of the picture.
The remnants of the manifestos are largely subjective today.
Only the artist, by virtue of some sort of divine right, may define his art.
While at ArtCenter, I made the grave mistake of calling the grotesque subject
of associate artist Sara Stite's watercolors - creatures with hirsute arms on
headless fleshy objects, torsos with gaping mouths, hairy pelvises with feet
and so on - monstrosities" and "monsters".
"Don't call them that, you can't call them monsters, you
have to ask the artist what they are," imperiously stated another
ArtCenter associate.
"But of course," I said, amiably but sarcastically,
"There are no standards for anything at all, therefore everything is
equal. Everything is absolutely justified by its creator."
She thought I was serious; my remark drew an approving smile. I silently
recalled that a friend of the Russian Cubo-Futurists envisioned the fourth
dimension as a sort of utopia where an infinite number of words would be needed
to name each object according to the subjective prejudices of everyone
involved.
All in all, I think another bonfire of the vanities is called
for today, but not a revolution. The time is nigh to burn the clutter framing
the fine pieces. We have no cause to fear for the destruction of the masterpieces
themselves. Savonarola, contrary to historical gossip, did not demand the
destruction of the dearest objects: as the flames rose on Florence corners; the
brisk trade in precious metals and fine handicrafts and fine art continued
apace. As for the modern revolution, the accelerating dissolution and disintegration
of traditional society was represented by modern art, but it was not painted
right away. In 1857, New England Transcendentalist Orestes Brownson anticipated
twentieth-century complaints about the atomizing individualization of modern
society:
"The work of destruction commenced by the Reformation,
introducing an era of criticism, had, I thought, been carried far enough. All
that was dissoluble had been destroyed, and it was time to begin the work of
reconstruction - a work of reconciliation and love.... The first thing to be
done is to cease our hostility to the past."
Modern artists of iconoclastic disposition generally disliked
history, tradition, convention, anything that smacked of authority. Down with
History! Down with thinking and language! Death to art! Down with prostituted
beauty! Down with frivolous and elegant and pretty art! Given modern art's
original contempt for history, it is hardly surprising that contemporary
artists - of course every artist of every time is contemporary - know little of
their roots or the lessons and alternatives that history offers. Every school
kid should know that the modern artistic revolution was born between two world
wars, that it was a revolution against war and the perfectly logical
justification for murdering millions of people. So much for the cogent,
enlightened reason of the vultures under the scorching Sun, they said, as their
anti-intellectual manifestos grew increasingly absurd. They threw traditional
art into the bonfire of its own infernal Sun, and proclaimed a complete break
with history.
At each moment of the past," declared Piet Mondrian
(1872-1944), "all the variations of the old might have been called new.
But this was never the new as such. For we must not forget that we are at a
turning point in the history of culture, at the end of everything old in
the global sense. The divorce between the old and new is now absolute,
definitive. Plastic art must move not only parallel with human progress, but
must advance ahead of it."
In Victory over the Sun (victory over
conventional art), the Russian Suprematists declared themselves
immortal as well: "Everything is good that has a good beginning. The world
will die, but for us there is no end." (1913)
Realists, sickened by the customary fictions, made the first
break, and it was not long before invisibility became reality and every example
in the world was rejected off hand. Everything must be smashed to bits,
preferably into atoms. The Cubists tried to abolish conventional rules of
perspective, to representing an allegedly omniscient view of an object, a view
from all sides at once. Perhaps a divine artist might imagine such a thing, but
a realistic representation of omniscience is impossible. We are left with
allusions to the omniscient view, by means of finite multiple perspectives. But
sight is only one sense, and to see is not to know everything. An
"omniscient" grasp of an object is better sensed by wrapping the hand
around it. Touch is at the foundation of intelligence. The manipulative hand
helped teach man (manu - he who draws
out thoughts) reasonable procedures, yet reason never left behind its origin
with things in womb and hand.
As far as Kasimir Malevich (1878-1933) was concerned,
cubist fragmentation did not go far enough. Smash everything; what is left is
good, cried an anarchist. After all, when nothing seems to work, it is best to
start with Nothing, if one can get there by smashing things, for Nothing works.
"The Cubo-Futurists piled objects in the main square and
destroyed them, but they did not burn them. Pity!" exclaimed Malevich,
once the foremost supporter of Russian Cubism. Pulverizing things frees the
artist. Malevich had flown farther than Cubism, where no artist had gone
before, into the Nothing beyond dimensions, a discontented space where, if
Nothing exists, one has all the benefits of weightlessness.
"This space takes the place of cosmic space without any
determination by relation of a person or a thing. It is without dimension,
without orientation; it ignores right and left, high and low, near and
far." I have capitalized 'nothing' because nothingness is not intended,
but rather the pregnant feeling of its infinite possibilities.
Malevich painted his void white, a white square on white
canvass, to indicate infinite space, into which he wanted to launch a
Suprematist satellite. The black of his black square ("rectangle"),
he said, represented anarchy, and the black cross, his death. A square felt
rather good to Malevich: "It is difficult for you to get warm in the face
of a square," he wrote to a critic, "accustomed as you are to get
your warmth from a sweet little face.... The secret of the incantation is the
art of creation itself, and it lies in time, time which is greater and wiser
than swine!"
Well, a man may be a square, but he hopes for something beyond
geometry. In 1915, Malevich wrote: "I have transformed myself into a zero
of form, and have gone beyond 'O' to '1'." But after waxing eloquent on
the square, he effuses: "A blissful sense of liberating non-objectivity
drew me forth into the 'desert,' where nothing is real except feeling.... and
so feeling became the substance of my life."
"The general philosophical path of these trends," he
declared while questioning imitative art, "leads to the disintegration of
things, to the non-objective and to Suprematism, as a new utilitarian body and
to the spiritual world of phenomena.... We are going to work on new creative
constructions of life...." Moreover, " I think that freedom can be
attained only after our ideas about the organization of solids have been
complete smashed. This liberates each unit from the single, complex mass made
up of units of energy."
Wherefore Malevich would atomize everything into energetic
particles, witnessed by mere mortals as material forms, and he wound up with
the pure feeling corresponding to pure colors:
"Everything is linked and at the same time separate in its
own motion.... This notion was the impetus for breaking up the visual
complexity of a solid and dividing its mass into the separate colors of
Suprematism.... My research has shown that color in its basic state is
autonomous; that is, each ray has its own energy and characteristics. When
colors are mixed the produce different hues and release new color energies....
In Suprematism the mass of energy breaks down into individual color constructs
on the two-dimensional plane - with the result that each plane or volume
becomes an independent unit powered by its own motion. Thus, in expressing pure
colored form, the colored period of Suprematism discovered the very essence of
color.... As a result, Suprematist atomization of the picture and the reduction
to single color has released the action of atomization.... This process of
isolation has created the form of the black or colorless square, a form that in
its atomization offered all kinds of other forms, and these in turn were
painted many different colors.... Such forms, of course, do not express anything
related to the objective world, and in the viewer's mind they are
non-objective. Consciousness now begins to operate with supremes, with
individual units - the signs of dynamic mathematical connections. Expressing
this dynamic functioning is the primary purpose of consciousness. The forms are
built exclusively on white, which is intended to signify infinite space. The
tactility of this dynamism, however, beings to assume importance in this kind
of composition."
Suprematism, then, as Malevich defined it, was pure feeling of
pure color. Of course white is the pregnant color, the "color" of sunlight
unbent into its spectrum. The pure feeling is the transcendental feeling of the
new man, the superman, the godly artist whom several philosophers thought would
lead the way to utopia: "Art in its highest manifestation is a path to
cosmic consciousness," declared a mystically
inclined philosopher. But the philosophers soon changed their mind,
and, like Plato, they concluded that artists cannot get there except by lucky
flashes of the transcendental intuition once associated with enthusiasm
("god-possession").
Critics declared the Suprematist scheme absurd. Of course
it was logically absurd, and intentionally so. Every A is, at the same time,
not-A. In 1911 Ouspensky praised art for freeing itself from
three-dimensionality: "All art is just one entire
illogicality."
The artistic magus is a clairvoyant, a
Superartist who discerns the nature of the ideal world behind
the veil of the illusory "real" world. Malevich's circle strove
to transcend logic with their "alogical" art. To get
at the truth, which is a moving target, one has to contradict oneself from time
to time - even the orthodox critic Ruskin said that he liked to contradict himself
several times in every article for good measure.
When Malevich eventually repudiated "all aesthetic
beauties, experiences, or moods," he repudiated feeling; hence some
critics think that, despite his profession of pure feeling, Malevich was not a
feeler at all, but rather a frustrated thinker who needed to work on his
writing skills. As for his black quandrangle, some time after hanging it high
on the wall like a Russian religious icon, he denied having mystical
inclinations and said the Black Squre represented nothing but itself and his
relationship to it. We should recall here that Ouspensky double-crossed
the Suprematists. As we have seen, he said that all art is
irrational, and said the irrational artists would lead the way into the
fourth dimension; but he was not pleased with their art, and denounced it in
the next addition of his masterpiece.
One version of the spiritual utopia intuited by the Russian
Suprematists was realized in the concrete Soviet Union. Piet Mondrian,
artist-Theosophist, took up the question of the inherent instability of the
subjective nature of the Russian revolutionary movement. He envisioned a new
city on the hill to resolve the dissolution into a sort of tribal commune where
everyone would enjoy the same feelings and thoughts about art. The private, home-sweet-home
life as well as street life would be extinguished in Mondrian's city, and
replaced by a "unity formed by planes composed in neutralizing opposition
that destroys all exclusiveness."
I prefer the glass city of Zamiatian's WE. Mondrian
moved to New York, where he gave up his static city after becoming fond of
skyscrapers and things African, boogie-woogie for instance.
What remains in store for the world today, for the United States
and Miami Beach, remains to be seen. Let Indigo Stripes, which, depending
on your prejudice, progresses or regresses from the blank black or white square
of Suprematism, represent for our purpose tea leaves steeped in a cracked pot
of indigo held together by tar and cement. Here, in the gallery at
ArtCenter/South Florida in Miami Beach's chic South Beach, we witness a
representation of the marked reluctance to arrest the general decadence and
dissolution because it provides a great deal of money to the sponsors. We
witness a tendency to call those who protest the insanity they call freedom, "crazy",
and to recommend their commitment to therapeutic institutions, where art is
dope.
On one end of our grand scheme we find the affluent, whose
government buildings are virtual fortresses, penned up in gated compounds
manned by guards and voluntarily locked down in their condominium caves, or
residing in freestanding homes with bars over windows and doors. All that to
protect themselves from outlaws, i.e. "free"people. On the other end we find
prisoners confined in prison cells and in concentration camps, at an average
cost of $70,000 per annum, an average that gives us cause to believe that
involuntary prisoners should have luxurious, three-bedroom condominiums on the
ocean instead of sharing the bottom bunk by the steel toilet.
The Artecity complex, wherein Indigo Stripes will
rest in state, looks like a pink prison complex in the January 2005 Miami
Visual Arts Guide, complete with an exercise yard. And the indigo city on
the "art in the city" brochure also has the appearance of a
prison.
None of the above is intended as an insult to anyone at all, but
it will undoubtedly be perceived as such. It is merely another sign of a great
rectification pending. We must not blame the revolution on the enthusiastic
artists, many of whom do not understand the nature of their visions; they do
not know the mechanics of their motivation. Many artists have become automatic
feeling machines. They are, as Mondrian predicted, "living machines,
capable of realizing in a pure manner the essence of art."
No, do not blame the revolution on our artists or poets. Poets,
long before they became surrogate gods, were makers not of truth but of poems
revealing same. And artists, before they rid themselves of one-gods and became subjective
gods, were not revolutionaries, bound to creative-destruction as things moved
along for the hell of it. Modern artists certainly do not deserve much of the
blame, censorship and repression laid upon them for twentieth-century
revolutions. Nor will they deserve the blame for the escalating neoteric terror
of our twenty-first century.
As for me, my meditation on Indigo Stripes has
moved me to become a painterly painter. Indeed, I shall be the most radical of
the painterly painters. And in this my endeavor I shall do everything by doing
absolutely nothing, thereby transcending all the dimensions, and thus establish
the dictatorship of the painterly masses without a painting. To that end I
shall apply to ArtCenter/South Florida for my own studio, in the form of a
white sphere, that I, a painterly painter without a painting, dressed in black,
may be the world's greatest masterpiece, setting the stage for the
assassination of mediocrity and incompetence in art.

To Rakel with Love
by David Arthur Walters
Rakel, Karim Ghidinelli's eight-foot-tall fingerprint in "enamel paint on hand carved aluminum", won the $10,000 First Prize in ArtCenter/South Florida's Art in the City competition. The promotional contest was sponsored by the developers of the $100 million Art�city condominium complex to be completed in the Art District, a blighted Miami South Beach neighborhood now being rehabilitated pursuant to an arty ideology entitled "Artistic Urbanism". Rakel will become a permanent fixture at Art�city.
Rakel's fingerprint, perhaps her left thumbprint, is realistically scrawled out in words on a 96 X 48 inch aluminum surface painted over with black enamel. We may categorize the composition as an "ideogram" or logogram, such as that of Apollinaire's French poem in the shape of the Eiffel Tower, or the earlier poetic ideogram by Panard (1674-1765), in the shape of a bottle.
I am informed that Mr. Ghidinelli teaches intermediate to advanced portraiture at the ArtCenter/South Florida artists' colony on South Beach's upscaled Lincoln Road Mall - where current rents are about $80 per square foot - and that he is an internationally noted artist. I have examined a few of his human figures: their blocky appearance does not suit my prejudice, but I have no doubt that the style is admired by many people, including critics who are better informed than I am on the subject of contemporary art.
As for Rakel, I regret to say that I passed her by during the contest. I did not select her for a prize or for honorable mention, although upon reconsideration I must say that she was well worth mentioning, at the very least, and that she will be a fascinating addition to the Art�city lobby. Upon hearing that she took the First Prize, my gut reaction spontaneously associated Rakel with Art�city life.
A fingerprint, I ruminated, is indeed suitable to the pink, prison-like appearance of Art�city as badly advertised (in my opinion) in the January 2005 Miami Visual Arts Guide. A French postmodernist once said that prisons exist to make us think we are free. Art�city, as an abode for the affluent, will perhaps make a large number of outsiders think they are enslaved, while providing them with an additional incentive to compete for sufficient funds to buy a unit, reasonably priced from the $ 200,000s to $1 million. Today it seems that the richest and poorest elements of society wind up in expensive, well guarded compounds. Those in between are not so secure.
Mind you that I do not consciously intend my spontaneous free associations and the expression thereof to be insulting to either Rakel or Art�city. Our reflections on our first impressions might, in some cases, reveal that first impressions are really not the lasting ones. The more we know about something, the more we might like it. I examined Rakel to see what further information, besides her fingerprint, she might disclose about her nature. I proceeded to read the long-handed sentences comprising the fingerprint, craning my neck this way and that until I got a kink in my neck and had to desist. I did manage to record the following excerpts:
"Amazing question. If what I ask myself... indicates the depth of my convictions... for I think that I do not believe in something.... no matter what proof is presented to me... it is clear to me that I will live my life responding to what comes my way... do I need to make art.... I think I want to be an artist.... art is human and I make errors and I am human.... why do I? why do I want to be an artist? to be someone?"
I have corrected the misspellings. The cramp in my neck prohibited me from quoting an expressed concern with making a living as an artist.
No doubt the formal fingerprint is unique. It might be placed in the database for access by CSI: Miami, just in case of a major art theft. Most artists and modern persons who care enough about the art of living to reflect on their personal existence will empathize with Rakel's reflections. The more philosophical among them might conclude that, although the particular expressions of the individual might comprise unique coincidences of universal qualities such as skin colors or whorls, the inner existence giving rise to feelings and their social expression has even more in common with the existence of other individuals than their outward universal qualities, which of course vary according to individual types. In other words, despite wanting and loving unique subjective individuality, in particular contradistinction to and in rebellion against the society, the particular self is, to the extent that it exists, not really individual, but is essentially universal.
And in the final iconoclastic analysis the absolute freedom craved for, the will to persevere forever without defining resistance, as immortal and eternal, is the craving for Nothing, capitalized in this case to signify its pregnant meaning. An artistic expression of Nothing is virtually impossible but its integrity might be suggested, say, by white on white or black on black. Only an artist of great integrity can aptly express absolute eternity.
The more I reflected on the presence of Rakel, the more I loved her. And what is love? Love is your life, is it not? Whom do we love the most when we love another, if not our very selves? Mind you, my homophobia fashions a female soul for my dreams, hence I awake from my erotic dreams knowing I am straight in the carnal sense. As for Rakel, I "know" her not only because I have sensual knowledge of her as an image, but because the longer I live the artful life with her, the better I like her. The more we sensually know an art object, the better may we like it; but what we have fallen in Platonic love with is not the object itself, but is rather our knowledge of it, our very own reflections. When that object happens to be our own good self, we become then doubly infatuated, hence prone to drowning in our own reflections, giving no heed to the calls of the those nymphs who would recall us to the objective sphere, echoing our will to live as carnal individuals despite the universal death wish.
I would not abuse Rakel because I love her. And I will not put her off for another woman. But I have often dreamed of having two women at once, one on top and one below. Wherefore, in my capacity as art�critik for Art�w�rld�, I shall make an offering by way of konstructive kriticism. I shall keep Rakel, and set beside her for good measure my own ideogram, a fingerprint lifted from the Arch of St. Louis. Of course St. Louis is not Miami Beach, but my offering does appertain to Art in the City. Perhaps Rakel's creator will criticize my konstructive kriticism because it is not in the shapely form implied, that of a catenary arch. I certainly would like to see it in ideal form, perhaps in one, attractive case, without capitals or other sentence indications, ala the ancient Greek mode of writing.
St. Louis Arch
One never knows
where one might wind up
in the encyclopedia
or living circle of learning,
yet no matter where one is
along the Arc cradling the universe,
the principle of the line
moving through the moments in space
is immediately available to us,
hence we look not to the particular concrete bridges
over portions of the chasm to understand them,
but to the invisible principle
of the arch,
that we may employ it
to our own advantage
as our principle mediator
and discuss it among ourselves
according to our lights,
just as Thomas Jefferson and Thomas Paine corresponded
on the peculiarities of the catenary arch,
the general form of which can be observed
by freely hanging a heavy uniform chain
from two points not in the same vert ical line:
when the heavenly form
is set upon its feet in matter,
it is the most stable of all arches,
quite noticeable in our bridges,
if one is aware of what is going on.
The principle is alluded to in the Gothic arch,
and its most brilliant application as a work of art may be beheld
at the Gateway to the West
through which many dreamers passed to New Jerusalem.
And that place was called
St. Louis, Missouri,
after the only king crowned saint -
a tolerant king
except towards all infidels,
whom he said must be run
through with a sword -
alas, alas, forgive us Father
for the sins of our fathers
that we may be reconciled unto one another today,
and thank you for the good things they did,
and thank you St. Louis for sponsoring the bare-footed scholars
who were more interested in principles
than in gold.
Many people back East
said the Pure Land in the West is
at best an illusion,
at worst a delusion,
yet those who knew the truth of it said,
"Go West young man,"
and they did, and they took the women in their wagons.
Therefore today,
if we know the principle
of the catenary arch,
when we behold the wonderful arch
at St. Louis, Missouri
we know its appearance presents to us
an optical illusion,
of being higher than it is broad at its base -
in reality the two extensions are the same -
Wherefore we move on to consider other arches
above and below,
as we continue our trek to Pure Land,
knowing that the laws which we glean from the firmament
are applicable to the fundament,
for Heaven is firm
and Earth is fundamental.
The engineers still tell us
it cannot be done,
and they laugh at our plans
for our Elevator,
just as they laughed at the elevator man
who designed the ferris-wheel contraption
that allows us to traverse the catenary arch at
St. Louis, Missouri.
They say there is no Promised Land.
We say Westward Ho!
Visit David Coyote's Den
www.dcoyote.com
"Transition Suite 4, Miami Beach"
Oil and Acrylic Paint on Canvas
9 ft. x 7 ft., 2004
Transition Suite 4 Diane Hansen
Honorable Art�judges
by Art�w�rld� Art�kritik David Arthur Walters
Resident artists of ArtCenter/South Florida, an art colony located on Miami Beach's Lincoln Road Mall, recently competed for prizes in a contest entitled art and the city. The competition was sponsored by the developers of Art�city, a $100 million luxury condominium complex located behind Collins Park in South Beach's Art District.
Art�city triumvirate Alessandro Ferretti, Piero Salussolia, and Maurizio Cavelleri hope to revitalize their real estate business and turn a handsome profit for all speculators concerned, by associating their real estate project with Miami Beach's traditional artistic institutions, targeting the affluent market instead of the masses. The purchase of an Art�city condominium will include membership in several cultural institutions via an art�citycard. ArtCenter/South Florida is one of those institutions.
Art�city propaganda professes an underlying ideology, associated with the art�industrial complex, which its art�logues call "Artistic Urbanism." Although the publicity does little to elucidate its ideological lineage, it is not too difficult to discern its primary objectives: private profit and capital gain. The art� will hopefully add the traditional sizzle to the steak. The art-patronage of the developers will perchance gain them added prestige as benevolent civic leaders. That prestige will of course depend on their good judgement of art, something that has been historically lacking among civic leaders notwithstanding the most brilliant exception to bourgeoise vulgarity, the Medicis.
Art�city managing developer Alessandro Ferretti and Miami Art Museum director Suzanne Delehanty sat as the honorable judges of the art and the city competition. The theme of the competition upon which the submissions were invited was the presence of art in the city. The prize-winning art objects will become part of the permanent collection to be exhibited at the Art�city condominium complex. In effect, Art�city is publicizing its real estate project by sponsoring the ArtCenter/South Florida contest, and is, at the same time, buying the winning art: First Prize, $10,000; Second Prize, $5,000; Third Prize, $2,500.
I examined the contest entries some time before the winners were announced. In my personal judgment, Diane Hanson's Transition Suite 4 should have won First Prize. My judgment was based, first of all, on transcendental and sensory intution, and then on the unity of multiple art principles roundly ignored by Miami's commercial art experts, who tend to base their judgments on estimated return on contemporary art investment, now said to exceed twelve-percent per annum compounded. In keeping with the practice of those judges, I shall not render a formal opinion justifying my judgment. Since the principle of contemporary art is that there are no universal principles or objective standards for judging art, my opinion would only add to the confusion.
Mind you that I am not an art critic, art juror, or art judge: I serve Art�w�rld� as its Art�kritik for the express purpose of rendering my honest lay opinions on certain subjects that are, according to a written statement issued by an Art�city spokesperson, beyond the critical abilities of such a person as myself, whose art is, "from the beginning, insulting."
I regret to say that I have no prize money for Ms. Hanson. And she will received not a penny of the official prize money. Her submission did not place, although her composition did get an 'Honorable Mention.'
Transition Suite 4 at first glance gave me the impression of a medieval tryptych with two narrow addendums or wings added to the viewer's right. By the way, I am fond of the tryptychs at the Metropolitan Museum and at the Walters Museum of Art. Transition may not be folded up like a tryptych, but its five canvasses can be taken down and stacked up for transition to another exhibition. The five canvasses are puzzled together to form an irregular or offset horizontal array, over which the different upright scenes, connected by a vertical object such as a lamp or palm overlapping the borders, are painted side by side. The composition viewed from a distance presents the pleasant appearance of an irregular tapestry of subdued tones - brighter lighting, however, brings out the reds. A closer inspection reveals the scenes. If the viewer were not familiar with South Miami Beach, she would think they were impressions of an attractive Mediterranean city or village known for the art of causal living if not the artful life, in pleasant contrast to artistic urbanism. However, the scenes are impressions of South Beach: witness the Boardwalk, Ocean Drive, Lincoln Mall. Thus are the possibilities of living an artful and urbane life in South Beach expressed.
"Perfect!" I said to myself after examing Transition. "This is a fine, innovative but conservative work of art, quite fitting to the theme, would be a credit the lobby of any luxury condominium. What more could Art�city ask for?"
But it did not place. In the absence of an Opinion from the two judges, one can only compare Transitions with the winners and speculate on their relative merits - that sort of speculation is considered reprehensible by Miami's political and cultural winners.
First Prize went to Karim Ghidinelli's huge thumbprint scrawling, next to which I shall soon present my Konstructive Kriticism. Second Prize was won by Babette Hershberger's fascinating indigo abstract, something worthy of my abstractions as soon as possible. Third Prize was won by Patricio Cuello's row of seven pigment-selection sticks, pasted at the bottom of a blank canvass set within a box-frame - a demographic cross-section of skin colors "through NW 62nd Ave. (Martin Luther King)."
Despite my subjective differences with the judges, I must say that they honorably mentioned other works I had favored. In conclusion, and pursuant to the notion that opinions on art and its judges are merely subjective and are better left unsaid, I must say Ferretti and Delehante were the honorable art�judges of the art�city competition, and point out that they did not give a prize to my First Pick.
www.dianehanson.net
bravenet.com