|
|
MONEY, POWER and MODERN ART
PART IV: Modern art and socialism
By
Henry C K Liu
PART 1: Ruthless
Empire Builders
PART 2: A
Monetary Coup d'etat
PART 3: The
Year of Contradictions
It is in a milieu of social revolution through
the avant-garde
that Abby Aldrich Rockefeller developed an interest in modern art, an
avocation she would pass on to her son Nelson, who would play a key and
extended role in the Museum of Modern Art (MoMA) and later become a
liberal Republican governor of New York and vice president of the
United States in the administration of Gerald Ford as a result of
Richard Nixon's resignation over the Watergate scandal. "She was
attracted by the unusual, adventurous, inner-directed art," says
biographer Bernice Kert. "She liked experimentation, she was open to
new ideas, and also she wanted to understand the art that her children
would grow up to understand. In other words, she wanted to be a
modern." Abby's enthusiastic support of the work of artists such as
Henri Matisse, Diego Rivera, Vincent van Gogh, and Marc Chagall was a
source of friction between her and her conservative, if not
reactionary, husband. John D Rockefeller Jr strongly objected to his
wife's involvement in a new museum that would make such
"unintelligible" art available to the public. Abby went ahead anyway
and, in 1929, co-founded the Museum of Modern Art with friends Lillie P
Bliss and Mary Quinn Sullivan. "Mother's museum," as it would be known
within the family, was the first in the country to devote its
collection entirely to the Modern Movement, and now houses more than
100,000 works in a 630,000-square-foot (58,500-square-meter) building
that occupies half a city block in midtown Manhattan.
Abby's commitment to Modernism was felt even after her death in 1948.
Based on her will, which stipulated that any work older than 50 years
should be removed from the museum collection, some of the valuable
impressionistic works she had originally donated to the Modern were
transferred to other museums in 1998. The foresighted arts patron
believed that after half a century they would no longer be "modern" and
should not be housed in a modern-art museum. This attitude would
present a dilemma for the trustees of the Modern, as the early works of
the Modern Movement became increasingly valuable in the art market and
having them in its permanent collection provided the Modern with a
badge of authenticity and definitive authority as the seminal herald of
Modernism with proven prescience that had stood the test of time. The
Modern was torn between establishmentarianism and
anti-establishmentarianism; to be modern in the temporal sense, risking
its authority by being possibly wrong in heralding new artistic trends
that might turn out to be of only fleeting importance; or to be modern
in the periodization sense, bathing in the comfort of having correctly
identified the Modern Masters, as opposed to the Old Masters, before
they were generally appreciated. Few institutions in history have
managed the challenge of being revolutionary in more than one
generation, let alone perpetually. To be modern in a post-modern age is
to be traditional.
Founding director Alfred H Barr Jr (1902-81), the intellectual force
behind the Modern who managed to turn a few eccentric individual
collections that reflected idiosyncratic personal tastes into a
powerful statement of the philosophy of art, described the museum's
collection as a "torpedo moving through time". The Modern has since
faltered on its founding conviction on being modern in its handling of
the art of the first five decades of Modernism. Its permanent
collection, aside from becoming a priceless asset, has become too
valuable to give away and too iconic to dislodge.
A museum of modern art is in fact an oxymoron, comparable to the
absurdity of the embalmment of the living. Museums are institutions of
things past. The Latin meaning of the word denotes a place of learned
occupation, an institution devoted to the procurement, care and display
of objects of lasting value or interest, objects that have already
survived the test of time. The conceptual problem facing a museum of
modern art is that it must deal with artistic trends that have yet to
face the test of time. By definition, its collection becomes art of
lasting artistic value in a self-fulfilling prediction. Art galleries
are the marketplaces for contemporary art, while museums are
depositories of the best or at least the most representative art of an
epoch. Collectors always risk suffering the misfortune of having
acquired art works that will fall to the roadside of history. Museums
at times suffer the same risk. A museum that exhibits the latest trends
in art runs the risk of a conflict of interest, with a proclivity to
endow trends it exhibits with unwarranted lasting value and
respectability. There is no arguing that a museum aims to select what
is good and lasting; the danger is to confuse what a museum selects as
good and lasting. "Museum of modern art" rings of word abuse. A living
museum of modern art is not synonymous with a modern museum of living
art. When words are abused, they lose their ability to differentiate.
"One word in the wrong place," said Voltaire, "ruins the most precious
thought."
In recent decades, the Modern has become a doctrinal fortress of art
for art's sake. Its presentation strains to emphasize methodological
breakthroughs in formal high esthetics while covering up the underlying
revolutionary radicalism of the avant-garde, particularly its
rebellious socio-political roots that often frighten if not offend the
generally conservative trustees. It has taken on the role and mission
of adjudicator of Modernist taste and avant-garde esthetics and
confirmer of lasting relevance on the yet untested. It has sought to
focus on path-opening milestones in the development of new esthetics
detached from disturbing social roots. The Modern now reeks of the
staleness of academy in an art world that has continued to change and
expand beyond radical rejection of classical concepts of order, space
and color. It has become a hall of fame for dead revolutionaries who
have been transformed from living threats against the established
social order to esthetically revered but politically harmless icons. As
radicalism becomes institutionalized, revolution ossifies through
canonization.
Some critics have pointed out that the ne plus avant-garde
charge was off target, as the Modern has always been a congenitally
cautious institution. It opened in 1929 with a survey of Paul Cezanne,
Paul Gauguin, Georges Seurat and van Gogh at a time when these rebels
had been long dead. It would be like opening a contemporary art museum
today with a show about Abstract Expressionism or Pop Art or
Minimalism. And the Modern was slow in embracing Abstract Expressionism
and has yet to acknowledge the movement's violent anger against the
established order. In the course of the decades after its founding, a
steady flow of landmark exhibitions presented Cubism, Dada and
Surrealism years after they had been invented and survived official
ridicule, and only when the social contradiction had waned. The museum,
far from being an avant-garde asylum, was a legitimizing academy,
putting a stamp of good housekeeping on the conceptually dangerous by
turning revolutionary art aimed at a new consciousness for the masses
into high art above the level of the masses. It was then the museum's
mission to reintroduce this new art to the public after it has been
sanitized of its rebellious social content.
Alfred Barr wanted to build a museum that remained in touch with the
present but that also rethought and refined the past in terms of the
present. To him, "modern" meant "progressive", moving toward a higher
plane of civilization with enlightenment and courage through a new way
of seeing. He preferred the word "modern" to "contemporary" because the
latter only signifies being indiscriminately current with the times,
without any commitment to a new vision. To be modern is to be
progressive. To be contemporary in an age of reaction is to be
reactionary, not modern, a pitfall Barr clearly and presciently feared,
as exemplified by the Modern's revisionist show in 1976 of
architectural renderings from the Ecole des Beaux Arts, the tenacious
institutional nemesis of the Modern Movement in architecture.
In the autumn of 1928, Barr gave a course on modern art titled
"Tradition and Revolt" with sensational success at Wellesley, a
progressive college for upper-class women. The course description
outline read: "The achievement of the past - especially in the 19th
century. The 20th century: its gods and isms. The painter, the critic,
the dealer, the collector, the museum, the academies and the public.
Contemporary painting in relation to sculpture, the graphic arts,
architecture, the stage, music, literature, commercial and decorative
arts. Fashionable esthetics, fetish and taboo. Painting and modern
life. The Future." The seminar at Wellesley was probably the first
college course to deal with the art of the early 20th century. Barr
pioneered the use of color slides for studying the works of Pierre
Bonnard, Lyonel Feininger, Giorgio de Chirico and Chagall, and
initiated his students into Cubist and Futurist art. Included among the
"isms" he treated was also a young movement he called the
"Superrealists", as the term "Surrealism" had not yet been coined.
Taking inspiration from Le Corbusier's important book Vers une
Architecture (1922), Barr had his classes visit well-designed
modern train stations, industrial buildings and new works of
engineering, such as bridges and dams. He also discussed the design of
objects of daily use, furniture, and automobiles. The English
translation of Corbu's book changed the French title from Vers une
Architecture to Towards a New Architecture (1927),
misdirecting subsequent generations of architects on a skewed course to
seek new-isms in style, misinterpreting Corbu's unifying idea of a
timeless architecture as the mother of all arts molded by the
specificities of different epochs.
Inspiration in Europe
The innovative approach of Barr's course on
modern art prepared him for directing the launching of a new museum of
modern art. Midway through an academic year, after he was informed of
having been selected as the founding director of the proposed museum,
Barr, with his friend and later assistant at the Modern, Jere Abbott, a
member of a textile-manufacturing family in Dexter, Maine, embarked on
a European tour in 1927 that lasted several months to soak up new ideas
for the direction of the future museum. Barr had seen photographs of
the Bauhaus school designed by Walter Gropius at the Machine Age
Exposition in The Little Review, but visiting the actual Buahaus
building in Dessau, Germany, far surpassed all Barr's expectations
based on photographs.
The Little Review, founded by Margaret Anderson, the most influential
literary magazine in English in the 1910-20s, introduced great writers
such as Ezra Pound, T S Eliot, James Joyce and Wyndham Lewis to the
world, most famously Joyce's Ulysses, the publishing for which
editor Anderson was tried for obscenity. Ezra Pound was foreign editor
and was closely identified with the magazine.
Starting in the Netherlands, where Barr and Abbott studied the works of
Piet Mondrian, Theo van Doesburg and other members of the De Stijl
group in museums and private collections, they traveled to the Bauhaus
via Berlin, where the connection between the Harvard tradition and the
Modernist adventure seemed to come full circle. Barr later recalled:
"This multi-departmental plan [of the Museum] was ... inspired by Rufus
Morey's class in Medieval art ... and equally important, the Bauhaus of
Dessau. Morey, who used to lose his temper and swear about the Bauhaus,
would be surprised at this parentage, but there are real similarities
between the Bauhaus and the Medieval art course when you come to study
them." The similarities were a sense of historical imperative, a
respect for conceptual structure and the fusion of all art in
architecture.
Barr's sojourn in Dessau fortified his comprehensive cultural approach
based on Gropius' guiding principle of total architecture: "Let us
desire, devise, and together create the building of the future, which
shall be everything in a single form: architecture and sculpture and
painting." Barr was impressed by the school's international make-up and
by the pedagogy in its workshops as well as by Feininger's enthusiasm
for the Bauhaus jazz band, Gropius' ambitious vision, his encounters
with Paul Klee, and his debates with Laszlo Moholy-Nagy. The wide scope
the two enthusiastic men from Harvard covered on their European trip
attested to their urgent desire to use every chance possible to absorb
Modernist trends for their task of shaping the path of the new museum
in New York.
Departing from Berlin, Abbott and Barr traveled to the Soviet Union,
the scene of the new and exciting in both politics and art. "He was
constantly preoccupied with the Constructivists," remarked architect
Philip Johnson, who would become the Modern's curator of Architecture
and Design under Barr and who went on to become a commercially
successful post-modern practitioner. "The Constructivists were on his
mind all the time. Malevich was to him, and later to me, the greatest
artist of the period. And you see, the Constructivists were
cross-disciplinary, and I'm sure that influenced Alfred Barr, both that
and the Bauhaus."
Kasimir Malevich (1878-1935) wrote: "Under Suprematism, I understand
the supremacy of pure feeling in creative art. To the Suprematist the
visual phenomena of the objective world are, in themselves,
meaningless; the significant thing is feeling, as such, quite apart
from the environment in which it is called forth ... Art no longer
cares to serve the state and religion, it no longer wishes to
illustrate the history of manners, it wants to have nothing further to
do with the object, as such, and believes that it can exist, in and for
itself, without 'things' (that is, the 'time-tested well spring of
life'). But the nature and meaning of artistic creation continue to be
misunderstood, as does the nature of creative work in general, because
feeling, after all, is always and everywhere the one and only source of
every creation. The emotions which are kindled in the human being are
stronger than the human being himself ... they must at all costs find
an outlet, they must take on overt form, they must be communicated or
put to work ... The black square on the white field was the first form
in which non-objective feeling came to be expressed. The square equals
feeling, the white field equals the void beyond this feeling." Malevich
did not include service to capitalism as something art had also
rejected because in the new Soviet Union, capitalism had been given a
dialectical burial. In the United States, where capitalism continued to
flourish, modern art became an easy and willing captor, voluntarily
limiting its radicalism to formal esthetics under the protective wings
of capitalism. Non-objective art is misinterpreted as devoid of social
content instead of a radical rejection of traditional society.
Barr's encounters in Moscow with the Russian avant-garde were
stimulatingly exhaustive. Friends organized cinema parties for him,
introduced him to theater directors or arranged visits with Vladimir
Tatlin (1885-1953), designer of the spectacular Monument of the Third
International (1919-20) that reduced the Eiffel Tower to an
old-fashioned icon. Barr also met El Lissitzky (1890-1941) and
Aleksandr Rodchenko (1891-1956).
In 1909 the Italian Futurists published their manifesto in the Parisian
newspaper Le Figaro. Their ideas filtered to Russia, and Malevich and
his followers, including Lissitzky, responded with ideas of their own.
Lissitzky studied engineering and architecture from 1909-14. After
being a painter, illustrator and designer of Soviet flags, he taught
with Malevich at Vitebsk and at art workshops in Moscow. He arrived in
Berlin in 1921 and set up exhibitions of art by the post-revolutionary
avant-garde, working also as a writer and designer for international
magazines. His achievements forged links between artists in Russia and
in the West, between Weimar's De Stijl and Constructivism. His own
Proun paintings, Proun being a Russian acronym signifying "for the new
art", express his vision of a world of physics inspired by modern
spiritualist thought. His work was intended to be a catalyst to
encourage "the broad aim of forming a classless society".
Rodchenko, one of the leading artists in the creative period
immediately following the Revolution of October 1917, was among the
most zealous of the Russian avant-garde who identified totally with the
policies of triumphant communism. By the mid-1930s, his photographic
work was celebrated for its powerful impact along with that of his
German contemporary Leni Riefenstahl. Like Tatlin, and unlike the
profoundly mystical Malevich, Rodchenko was an artist-engineer, blazing
theoretical trails to practical goals. The Russian avant-garde
intoxicated young radical artists all over the world with its radical
promise of the possibilities of a new society. After the Cold War, when
communism was no longer viewed as a threat, the Museum of Modern Art
finally presented the first US retrospective of the work of Rodchenko.
On view from June 25 through October 6, 1998, the exhibition comprised
more than 300 works in a wide range of media and included a model of
the Workers' Club that Rodchenko designed for the Exposition
Internationale des Arts Decoratifs et Industriels Modernes. The
Modern's catalogue for the exhibition read: "The Revolution forced
Russian artists and intellectuals to make difficult political choices,
and many emigrated. Rodchenko and other members of the avant-garde soon
sided with the Bolsheviks, who welcomed their support. Thus it was that
a tiny, gifted, obstreperous group, whose sophisticated art was unknown
to the vast majority of the Russian people, set forth their own
artistic ideals as the vanguard of communist culture - and in the
process created a unique and lasting body of art and theory."
In the Soviet Union, Barr energetically hunted down icons in museums,
watched Sergei Eisenstein (1898-1948) as the master filmmaker edited
the film October, which had been commissioned for the 10th
anniversary of the October Revolution of 1917, bought a watercolor from
Diego Rivera, who was staying in Moscow at the time, and studied the
architecture of modern Soviet apartment buildings.
Eisenstein's reception in Europe nurtured his opinion that he could be
both avant-garde artist and creator of popular and ideologically
uncompromising films. In every country he visited he was hailed by
radical students and intellectuals. He met with Joyce, Jean Cocteau,
Abel Gance, Filippo Marinetti, Albert Einstein, Le Corbusier and
Gertrude Stein, all of whom were passionately excited about his work.
In May 1930 Eisenstein arrived in the United States, where he lectured
at several Ivy League schools before moving on to Hollywood, where he
hoped to make a film for Paramount, but that never came to pass. He was
welcomed by leading Hollywood figures, including Douglas Fairbanks,
Joseph von Sternberg, Walt Disney and especially Charlie Chaplin,
himself a communist, who became his close friend.
"The work of art is a symbol, a visible symbol of the human spirit in
its search for truth, freedom and perfection," Barr wrote. Barr was
schooled on art and art history both at Princeton, where he entered at
age 16, and Harvard in the 1920s before he traveled extensively in
Europe to see for himself its multitudes of great museums and schools
devoted to art. He had a lasting love of the paintings of Vincent van
Gogh. He had an instinctive grasp of the myriad influences of artists,
often charting them out in extensively detailed diagrams, showing
clearly how one art form influenced another, making sense of their
twisting labyrinths. Under his direction, the Modern was committed to
preserving and showing the newest, best, and most imaginative works of
art the world had to offer the viewing public. The compromise he had to
make, given the nature of US society, the conservatism of the trustees
of a private museum and the political climate of the Cold War, was to
de-emphasize the socialist content of the art he presented.
The Garrison State
One could only guess where Barr would have taken
the museum in a more liberal age, not to mention the direction of the
Modern Movement. Counterfactual theorists may speculate that had John D
Rockefeller been born in czarist Russia, he might have channeled his
revolutionary energy in unifying the oil industry into building a new
rational society and became a Lenin. In many ways, what saved the
Modern Movement in the US, more than the sanitizing of its socialist
content, was its rejection by the Soviets, a fundamental error in a
series of fundamental errors traceable to a garrison-state mentality,
killing the revolution to protect the revolution. Josef Stalin, who saw
the state as the sole agent of revolution, rejected non-objective art
that openly refused to serve the interest of the state, thus making
itself counter-revolutionary, notwithstanding its aim of expressing the
promise of a new society.
Freedom is always under attack in any society beset with a
garrison-state mentality. The "war on terror" has turned the US into a
police state. Stalin did many inhumane things in the name of preserving
institutional revolution. Josef Vissarionovich Stalin (1879-1953) would
in fact fit the definition of a Lutheran diehard, at least in
revolutionary strategy if not in ideological essence. Like Martin
Luther (1483-1546), Stalin suppressed populist radicalism to preserve
institutional revolution, and glorified the state as the sole
legitimate expeditor of revolutionary ideology.
Early Protestantism, like Stalinism, became more oppressive and
intolerant than the system it replaced. It heralded in a period of
blanket suppression of the arts, which the Counter-Reformation took
advantage of by launching the Age of Baroque, which produced much great
art. Ironically, puritanical Protestant ethics celebrating the virtues
of thrift, industry, sobriety and responsibility were identified by
many sociologists as the driving force centuries later behind the
success of modern capitalism and industrialized economy,
notwithstanding its barren artistic garden. Particularly, ethics as
espoused by Calvinism, which in its extreme advocated subordination of
the state to the Church, diverging from Luther's view of the state to
which the Church is subordinate, was ironically credited as the spirit
behind the emergence of the modern Western industrial state. In that
sense, the post-Cold War Islamic theocratic states are Calvinist in
principle, as is the neo-conservative George W Bush administration. In
the United States, the Russian avant-garde was also suppressed by the
garrison mentality of McCarthyism.
Barr was visionary enough to recognize how impressionists and even the
surrealists grew out of the classical mode. He also understood the
importance of an institution devoted to new and emerging art forms,
especially the new and less critically accepted art forms such as
photography and film, which had been given short shrift in high-brow
college classrooms at the time, considered as nothing more than media
of "popular entertainment". He gave serious treatment to all practical,
commercial, and popular arts. Advertising art, photography and film
were shown with equal attention to a van Gogh or a Picasso. All these
popular expressions were seen, through discerning eyes, as related
components in the total world of art. In Barr's own words, "A work of
art ... is worth looking at primarily because it represents a
composition or organization of color, line, light and shade.
Resemblance to natural objects, while it does not necessarily destroy
these esthetic values, may easily adulterate their purity. Therefore,
since resemblance to nature is at best superfluous and at worst
distracting, it might as well be eliminated." Even now, three-quarters
of a century later, such extremes as Chris Ofili's elephant-manure
Madonna, Damien Hirst and his dissected cows, Sue Coe, with her
riveting and disturbing imagery, would all have a home in Barr's
liberal and "thinking man's intellectual" version of modern art. Yet in
1950, the Modern excluded the still life A Distinguished Air
from a major Demuth retrospective because it considered its sexual
theme too controversial. Charles Demuth (1883-1935) was best known for
his landscapes of industrial America, featuring bridges, grain silos
and factories.
Barr Named Founding Director
In June 1929, at age 26, taken entirely by
surprise, Barr was informed by his mentor Paul J Sachs (1878-1965),
professor and associate director of the Fogg Art Museum at Harvard,
that he had been selected to become the founding director of the Museum
of Modern Art. While Barr brought Modernism closer to Sachs, the latter
introduced the young student to museum life. Sachs had ended a long
career on Wall Street at the age of 37 in order to dedicate himself
entirely to his passion for art and collecting. As a financier and a
partner of the family bank Goldman Sachs, he brought not only his
extensive knowledge of art to Harvard, but also the business prowess of
a banker, which he quickly applied to his involvement in the art world.
For Abby Aldrich Rockefeller, who was to become the closest ally of the
future director Barr, radical patronage of art was coupled with liberal
social commitment. While the donations and estates the three collector
friends laid the foundation for the institution, her personal
commitment contributed to making the Museum of Modern Art into the most
influential institution of the 20th century. Barr wrote: "Not only is
modern art artistically radical, but it is often assumed to be radical
morally and politically, and sometimes indeed it is. But these factors
which might have given pause to a more circumspect and conventional
spirit did not deter [Mrs Rockefeller], although on a few occasions
they caused her anxiety, as they did us all." Barr's memories of Abby
Aldrich Rockefeller did not match the conservative reputation of the
Rockefeller family. On the contrary, she was especially enthusiastic
about Barr's progressive ideas, his plans for the interdisciplinary
departments of the Modern, and his wish to bring living contemporary
art closer to people in an understandable way. She liked Barr, as she
wrote Sachs after their first encounter, and felt that his youth, his
enthusiasm, and his knowledge were all positive attributes.
The young museum's inaugural exhibition proved to be an immense popular
success: 47,000 visitors came to see the paintings of Cezanne, Gauguin,
Seurat and van Gogh. On the show's last day alone, 5,300 people tried
to enter the six rooms of the rented apartment in the Heckscher
Building. A US institution to the core, the Modern's roots traced back
to the avant-garde art movements of Europe. As divergent as the
influences on its history may seem, they embodied the intellectual and
social upheavals of Modernism that left their mark on the young
museum's budding program. Dedicated both to the liberal ideals of the
US upper class and the socialist vision of the Bauhaus, the founding of
the Museum of Modern Art marked an unparalleled cultural awakening that
changed the way in which modern art was perceived in the US, as an
academically respectable and socially non-threatening movement.
Hired by the wealthy art-collecting elite to validate their tastes by
creating a museum for their art, Barr acted as their adviser and
procurer of art during the early years when the museum bought almost no
art at all. The works he selected, many of which were donated back to
the museum, formed the canon of modern-art history. But the museum was
late to purchase New York abstract expressionists when they lived and
exhibited under the very nose of the museum. As a museum director, Barr
instituted aggressive advertising campaigns for the museum at a time
when few other art museums did, insisting that exhibition catalogues be
accessible both financially and intellectually to the public. His
concept of art history was a construct of "isms" linked in a linear
fashion. In 1935 Barr was one of those invited to the famous informal
gathering of art scholars organized by Columbia University art
historian Meyer Schapiro (Modern Art: Nineteenth and Twentieth
Century, 1978) that included Robert Goldwater, the dealer Jerome
Klein, Erwin Panofsky and Lewis Mumford.
According to Marshal Bergman (All That Is Solid Melts into Air: The
Experience of Modernity), Schapiro (1904-96) of Columbia was a
product of Jewish immigrant culture and the New York public school
system, a brilliant upstart in a university that still belonged to
Anglo-Saxon gentlemen and that granted him tenure and recognition only
grudgingly, when it turned out that lots of people in the rest of the
world knew his worth. He was an intellectual activist, close to the
Communist Party in his youth, through much of the 1930s and '40s a
militant left-wing socialist, later a liberal social democrat, a
founding editor of Dissent magazine, dialectical in sensibility,
oriented toward history and social development, always focused on the
politics of culture. Schapiro built his career around the exploration
of Modernism. He asserted the dignity of modern art and literature, and
fought for recognition of its permanent value; he showed how this art
and literature could help and also force the world to see into the
heart of modern life. That life, he believed, was animated by
contradictory drives, both around and within us, and was at once a
thrill and a horror. The writers and artists he loved most were radical
critics of their culture, yet expressed its deepest values. In their
feeling for cultural contradictions, Schapiro gave a new subtlety and
depth to intellectual Marxism.
Modern Art, whose contents span five decades,
contains Schapiro's 1937 "Nature of Abstract Art" essay, a tour de
force that situated abstract art amid the conflicts of modern
history, and highlighted the combative impulse that drives it: in
leaving nature and society out, or distorting them drastically, the
abstract painter "disqualifies them from art"; this essay explained, a
decade in advance, why Abstract Expressionism would have to happen, and
happen in the United States. The book includes two shorter, more recent
pieces on abstract painting; Schapiro's brilliant 1941 essay "Courbet
and Popular Imagery"; fascinating studies of van Gogh, Seurat, Mondrian
and Arshile Gorky; and "The Armory Show: The Introduction of Modern Art
in America" (1956). These essays captured the subjectivity and inner
life of modern artists, the totality of historical forces around them,
the rivers that ran through them, the spiritual twists and leaps they
experienced, the breakthroughs they finally achieved. Along with a few
other children of the century - Walter Benjamin, Hannah Arendt, Theodor
Adorno, Herbert Marcuse, Harold Rosenberg, Paul Goodman - they were
just the sort of "free-thinking Jews" that T S Eliot warned his readers
against: they expressed "the modern spirit" better than anyone, but
were menaces to "the idea of a Christian society".
In 1935, Barr hired Beaumont Newhall to be curator of photography and
Iris Barry (1895-1969) to establish the first film library to be part
of a museum. In 1939 the first of Barr's panegyrics to Pablo Picasso
appeared, Picasso: Forty Years of his Art. In 1943 Steven
Clark, a conservative, became chairman of the board of the MoMA.
Disputes with Barr erupted and Clark fired him. The popular legend,
told years later, that Barr retired to the library, refusing to leave,
was not true. A special position was created for Barr (his salary cut
to US$6,000 a year). In 1944 the museum appointed Rene d'Harnoncourt as
director, whose sensitivity to the situation with Barr and gentle
personality allowed both men to function positively. Barr remained true
to the artists whom he championed. In 1944, during the height of World
War II, when Piet Mondrian died in New York, Barr arranged for his
funeral. Meyer Schapiro faulted Barr in the 1930s for explaining the
rise of abstract art "independent of historical conditions". Barr
denied Freudian analysis in art history. Yet the fact that Barr was a
leader in modern art cannot be questioned; he was the only historian to
write on the subject of modern art for the Gazette des Beaux Arts in
the 1940s.
Sybil Gordon Kantor in her biography Alfred H Barr Jr and the
Intellectual Origins of the Museum of Modern Art (2002) credited
Barr, born in Detroit as the son of a Presbyterian clergyman, with
furthering the Modern cause with more rebellion, more foresight, and
more discipline than any of his contemporaries. He exerted a greater
influence on the agendas of US museums and did more to determine the
reception of 20th-century art than any other museum director or curator
of the time. Barr's books on Picasso and Matisse and the best-selling What
Is Modern Painting? (1943) are works of astute and illuminating
historical analysis that have stood up to the test of time more than
half a century later.
Struggling Artists in a Struggling World
The Modern Art Movement began in the 19th century
when artists struggled to rebel against the established world view that
had lingered since the Renaissance, with its classic codes of
composition, meticulous execution, harmonious coloring, idealized
realism and heroic and mythical subjects. Patronage by church and
royalty had declined along with changing political realities, reducing
artists from the respectable status of privileged guildsmen to members
of the poorest segment of society, but giving them a new creative
freedom from patronage dictation. The combination of abject poverty,
loss of social status as fringe members of society, pent-up creativity
and freedom from fear of loss of non-existent sponsorship turned many
artists into rebellious souls against a vulgar society they despised.
Masterpieces were created by struggling artists in unheated studios
located in poor districts rather than prestigious royal academies,
freely expressing their unconventional vision without the stifling
dictates of official taste. The works were bought as finished products
by eccentric collectors who responded to their honesty, truth and
beauty. While abstract expressionism has always been present in all
art, painters beginning around 1870 took new delight in freedom of
expression and technique that marginalize the significance of the
subject matter to capture universal truth about relationships of
shapes, light and colors in the new scientific age, separating form
from subject. While pre-classic expressionism had been anchored by
underdevelopment of visualization techniques, modern expressionism was
a rebellion against the perfection of visualization techniques of the
Renaissance.
Gustave Courbet, Edouard Manet, Edgar Degas and Camille Pissaro
celebrated ordinary lives of the common people with fleeting glimpses
of cafe society and urban life, drawing awareness to temporary emotions
in rejection of permanent glory. Henri de Toulouse-Lautrec painted the
sly nocturnal existence of the Parisian underworld, seeing raw beauty
in underclass members such as cabaret dancers and street prostitutes.
Seurat and Paul Signac developed disciplined systemic approaches
typical of neo-impressionism. Van Gogh and Gauguin gave color a new
intensity and excitement while Cezanne painted subtle tonal nuances to
achieve structural clarity through new ways of seeing, flouting the
rules of perspective to extract geometric forms from nature to record
radically new spatial patterns in conventional landscapes and
still-life. Van Gogh painted in rebellion to ascetic Dutch Reform
Church values while Gauguin painted in protest against Western
civilization. The Norwegian Edvard Munch visually captured the
horrifying shriek of psycho-torment. The Art Nouveau movement struggled
against the formality of classical decoration with free sinuous lines
readily found in nature. Fauvism (1905-08) pioneered the bold
distortion of form and the elevation of color from a supportive to a
defining role. This brief revolutionary outburst of creative energy
became the central influence of modern art for a whole century,
evolving into Cubism as a powerful revolt against representational art,
academic perfection and establishment taste of preference for
appearance over essence. Cubists saw truth as a merging of the humanity
of primitive cultures and a fragmented disorder of modern civilization,
rejecting the validity of any fixed points of view required by the
rules of perspective. The relationship between space and time became a
central theme in artistic discovery. A fascination with and unbound
fate in the future by exponents of Futurism in Italy contributed to the
rise of fascism with its glorification of danger, war and gigantic
machines.
World War I (1914-19), which started one year after the introduction of
modern art to the US by the Armory Show in 1913, marked the
catastrophic triumph of the Modern Age that had begun with the
Enlightenment, given political expression by the French Revolution,
solidified by Age of Napoleon and suppressed by the rise of
conservatism all over Europe after the restoration that followed the
fall of Napoleon. The war changed the world by ridding Europe of
monarchism and precipitating the October Revolution in Russia, giving
communism its first government in modern history. The postwar modern
age in Europe was a new age of social democracy from which modern art
sprang as its revolutionary expression. However, Western socialism
failed to put an end to Western imperialism, leaving the brotherhood of
man within strict racial boundaries.
In just one decade after the war to end all wars, the capitalist
world's free-wheeling financial system failed, producing the first
modern economic depression in 1929, the year the Museum of Modern Art
was founded. Within four years of the 1929 stock-market crash, under
conditions of worldwide depression, with massive unemployment and
hopeless spiritual malaise, democracy presented a desperate Germany
with the gift of a fascist state in the form of the Third Reich under a
demonic leader in the person of Adolf Hitler, replacing the
social-democratic government of the Weimar Republic, the sponsor of
German modern art and architecture, which the Third Reich promptly
suppressed. By 1939, the world was once again at war.
Fauvism and Cubism were introduced by the members of the Eight in the
seminal Armory Show in 1913 to a shocked United States, where Dadaist
leader Marcel Duchamp's Nude Descending a Staircase caused a
long and bitter controversy. The painting now is in the permanent
collection of the Philadelphia Museum of Art as a required pilgrimage
for art students. Following his maxim never to repeat himself, Duchamp
"stopped" painting (1923) after 20 works and devoted himself largely to
the game of chess.
On November 9, 1929, only a few days after the great stock-market
crash, the Museum of Modern Art opened in the rented 12th-floor rooms
of the Heckscher Building on Fifth Avenue with a show of works by
Cezanne, Gauguin, Seurat and van Gogh, intended to help the general
public understand and enjoy the new visual arts that had blossomed
three decades earlier. The public response, despite widespread
unemployment, was overwhelmingly enthusiastic. Over the course of the
next 10 years, the Modern moved three times into progressively larger
temporary quarters, and in 1939 finally opened the doors of the
building it had occupied in midtown Manhattan until the recent
rebuilding.
'A Bloodless Purgatory'
One critic called the new galleries in the new
building designed by Japanese architect Yoshio Taniguchi to house the
post-1970 arts a disappointment: "a suite of gigantic double-height
rooms on the second floor, physically and conceptually prominent,
declaring the Modern's intent to seem current, but also separated from
the art of the past on the upper floors. The space feels lofty and
utterly sterile, like a bloodless purgatory for work that hasn't yet
earned the right to ascend to the pantheon. Divided by decade, the
galleries are sparsely scattered with eclectic sculptures, paintings,
photographs and drawings that look washed ashore - the costly remains
from a sea of curatorial indecision ... the custodian of orthodox
modernism, and now also a huge bento box of shops, restaurants, cafes,
movie theaters, a garden and other diversions, along with art, to
justify as a full day's excursion the egregious ticket price."
Taniguchi was reported to have told Terence Riley, the Modern's chief
curator of architecture and design, that if the trustees raised enough
money, he could make the architecture of the new building disappear,
meaning that a minimalist and self-denying approach to museum
architecture could emerge that would not compete with the art on
exhibit. Such competition between museum architecture and the art on
exhibit had been highlighted by Frank Lloyd Wright's Guggenheim Museum
30 city blocks north, the greatest museum building in the world and in
all history.
At a cost of $858 million, the architecture of the new Modern
disappeared not from competition with the art on exhibit, but from a
poverty of ideas disguised as restraint. The entrance hall has the
chaotic atmosphere of the Times Square subway station, with long queues
for coat checking and ticket buying on crowded days. The approach to
the monumental stairway that leads to the piano nobili is anything but
noble, with a helicopter hanging overhead that a museum spokesman
compared to the Victoire de Samothrice at the head of the Escalier Daru
in the Louvre, except that visitors to the Modern would normally not
notice the helicopter in the narrow space above the "monumental stair"
until they turn and take an escalators to the third floor. Even then,
the helicopter, which is not particularly interesting as an industrial
design icon, is crammed into a closet of a space so narrow that if its
blades were to turn, the machine would crash into the pressing walls.
The delightful garden by Phillip Johnson is no longer an experience of
surprise after entering the museum as it was in the old building
designed by Phillip Goodwin, but a frontal onslaught from the open
lobby without the slightest subtlety. The interpenetration of space, a
hallmark characteristic of modern architecture, is nowhere to be
experienced in the new Modern building. The soaring height of the
decidedly meager central atrium leaves the space so ill-proportioned
that a serious case of vertigo can develop for most looking down nearly
34 meters from the upper floors. The circulation is so tortuous that
visitors unavoidably crash into one another trying to catch the
escalators that are so unimaginatively placed as to condemn the museum
to a feeling of a cheap department store, with landing signs for
galleries that echo "Ladies' Garments - Fourth Floor". Movement within
the building, a fundamental opportunity for architectonic celebration,
is pushed unceremoniously into a dark passageway, while glimpses of
connecting bridges are seductively visible from the central atrium with
no sense of how they are accessed.
Joerg Haentzschel of Die Sueddeutsche Zeitung suggested that visitors
might have trouble finding the revamped building, since Yoshio
Taniguchi's design is marked by an "esthetics of invisibility". "For
over a decade now, almost every new cultural building around the world
has tried very hard to mimic the hugely successful Guggenheim Bilbao,"
wrote Haentzschel. "Standing in front of the new MoMA, one looks in
vain for blobs, sloping angles or fluttering high-grade steel sails.
The building, with its glass facades and right angles, looks as if it
had always been there." Haentzschel saw a parallel between the subtlety
of the new structure and the intricate and Herculean, but largely
unreported, process of fundraising that was undertaken to pay for the
$858 million project.
Yet the remedy to showy architectural acrobatics is not boring
nihilism. The new exterior of the museum is unfriendly if not outright
hostile to the streets it faces, depriving pedestrians of needed visual
stimulation necessary for a rich urban experience. Long, boring
stretches of aluminum panels found usually on the side of trucks,
massive planes of smooth gray granite and black opaque glass graced the
sidewalks of two streets in oppressively deadening fashion, in a silent
scream for graffiti rage. Walking along 53rd Street or 54th Street
between Fifth and Sixth Avenues, the pedestrian is presented with the
feeling of walking along the edge of a prison, or to be more kind, the
forbidden walls of a citadel of art, absent of show windows which are
the source of delight in urban streetscape. The message appears to be:
pay the high admission fee or be shut out of art totally.
All the money seems to have gone into extremely constipated detailing
to hide contorted construction, with total denial of structural
expression. It is a nauseatingly self-effacing architectural statement
that perverts the insightful "less is more" dictum put forth by Ludwig
Mies van der Rohe into a senseless "more money buys less architecture"
self-indulgence. The new building has as much zen spirituality as a
Benihana steak house. Since the original, mediocre International Style
building designed by Philip L Goodwin and Edward Durell Stone, the
museum has ended with more space but less architecture with each
rebuilding, in a race to the bottom toward new depths of mediocrity.
Unmet Challenge
Hilton Kramer, the highly respected art critic
and ardent champion of abstract painting and sculpture wrote in The New
Criterion, the neo-conservative journal of art and culture that he
co-founded and edited, on the occasion of the Modern's reopening in
1984 after the previous major expansion, that creating an architecture
that would be perfectly consistent with the Modern's artistic purposes,
in a building that would reflect in all respects its lofty artistic
mission while at the same time serving its practical needs, is a
familiar unmet challenge for the museum.
In 1936, when founding director Barr and the trustees and benefactors
set about the task of selecting an architect to design the museum's
original building at 11 West 53rd St, the site of the former home of
the Rockefeller family, who donated the townhouse to the new museum,
Barr had hoped to be able to engage one of the great architects of the
modern movement for this important commission. During this period, the
museum had made the cause of modern architecture one of its principal
concerns. In 1931 for an exhibition on modern architecture, Barr coined
the term "international style" to describe the movement, a show curated
by Henry-Russell Hitchcock and Philip Johnson. In 1932, Johnson funded
the new department of architecture and became its first curator. It was
therefore to be expected that when the time came for MoMA to put up a
building of its own, the commission would go to one of the figures it
had already singled out as modern master architects.
Barr's own choices were three: Ludwig Mies van der Rohe, Walter
Gropius, both of the Bauhaus, and J J P Oud, a Dutch architect
associated with the avant-garde De Stijl group. Mies was clearly the
director's first choice. In a letter written in July 1936 to Abby
Aldrich Rockefeller, Barr referred to Mies as "the man who is possibly
the world's finest architect". And in another letter that month - this
one to A Conger Goodyear, the museum president - Barr left little doubt
about what the selection of an architect would mean for the museum
itself. "The museum, presumably, stands for the best," he wrote, "not
only in the art of our time but in architecture, too. I cannot but feel
that if we took a second best, or, what is just as likely, a fifth best
we would be betraying the standards of the museum in general and in
particular the standards which it has upheld in architecture." To Mrs
Rockefeller, Barr stated the matter in even stronger terms: "To rest
content with a mediocre building on such a site would be to betray the
very purposes for which the museum was founded ..." Barr lost this
battle. Mies would not design a building for New York until the Seagram
Building on Park Avenue in 1958, which has since stood head and
shoulders above all office buildings in Manhattan, and the world. The
ideal museum that Barr envisaged in 1936 would embody the exalted
standards which MoMA, under his direction, upheld in its architectural
exhibition and publications program. But it was never built. The
commission went instead to two mediocre American architects, Philip L
Goodwin and Edward Durrell Stone. Goodwin, though a MoMA trustee and a
collector of modern painting and sculpture, was about as far from being
a modernist as one could be in 1936. Russell Lynes, in Good Old
Modern, described Goodwin as "an architect with the eclectic tastes
of the Edwardian era and his roots ... in the neo-classicism of the
Paris Ecole des Beaux Arts" - the citadel of the opposition to
everything modern. Stone was a young, undistinguished recent convert to
Modernism who happened to be in the employ of Wallace K Harrison, one
of the architects of the Rockefeller Center. Barr had warned Mrs
Rockefeller that awarding the commission to Goodwin and Stone "will
almost certainly result in a mediocre building", but to no avail.
This fateful episode had a lasting bearing on the architectural fate of
the new MoMA, casting the Modern with a tradition of settling for a
"safe" solution in 1936 and leading to a fundamental split in MoMA's
architectural policies - a split that, from its founding days down to
the present day, has separated the ideals put forward in the museum's
architectural exhibition and publications from the practice in the
museum's own building program. It is a split that manifested itself
again in 2004 at a cost of $858 million.
In the November 22, 2004, issue of the New York Observer, Kramer wrote
in an article titled "Oedipus on 53rd Street": "Instead of a
forward-looking, truly innovative plan for both the new gallery space
and the new installation of the museum's permanent collection, we're
constantly recalled to the many ways in which the new MoMA remains
mired in the arguments and conventions of its own past. As a
consequence of this reluctance to make a fresh start for a very
different period and a very different public, the new MoMA is full of
reminders of the successes and blunders of the old MoMA. The first and
gravest of our disappointments is with the ill-conceived architecture.
Yoshio Taniguchi's redesign has at every turn in its cold and
elephantine structure the look and feel of a Japanese parody of the
kind of American modernism that has itself long outlived its expiration
date. Thus the galleries are essentially an architectural assemblage of
- what else? - bleak, oversized white boxes in which the scale of the
interior space and the unrelieved whiteness of the walls conspire to
discomfort the viewer while diminishing the aesthetic integrity of
works of art marooned in an environment remarkably hostile to the
pleasures of the eye."
Kramer accused the curatorial staff of compounding the problem of the
new unwelcoming exhibition spaces for the installation of MoMA's
permanent collection by the apparent determination of curator to come
up with a scheme that would emphatically be seen to resemble as little
as possible the classic installations of the late Alfred Barr, MoMA's
founding director, by a systematic deconstruction of Barr's pioneering
work in establishing a coherent, stylistically oriented history of
modernist art. Barr created programs and diagrams that trace a
succession of esthetic influences and intellectual linkages that
constitute a history of modernism; his installations were based on this
historical scenario, which for generations of artists and critics
became the accepted way of comprehending the modern tradition of art.
That's the spirit in which Barr labored to codify the history of
modernist art that no other writer on the subject has succeeded in
improving on his work. Yet, precisely because Barr's conception of the
modern tradition acquired a kind of orthodoxy, it was inevitable that
it would also in time provoke some categorical dissent. The new MoMA,
in effect, has transformed itself into the principal voice of the
anti-Barr opposition. Thus, in a long essay marking the inauguration of
the new MoMA, the museum's chief curator, John Elderfield, writes with
unconcealed glee that "by a happy coincidence ... on the 40th
anniversary of Barr's installation, a truly new one could be created
from scratch".
In Elderfield's view, what went wrong in the Barr installation was that
"the painting and sculpture galleries had become unduly hermetic,
prescriptive, and progressive in their linear, spinal arrangement - the
viewer needed sanction to slow down - while the small size of the
individual galleries no longer served the requirements of an intimate
address to the works of art".
What has categorically changed at MoMA is the way the museum presents
works of art to its public. Heretofore, MoMA's presentation was largely
based on a formalist-historical model in which the aesthetics of style
was given priority over subject matter or thematic motifs. In the
series of MoMA 2000 exhibitions, the formalist-historical model was
rejected by MoMA in favor of an emphasis on the subject matter of art.
One of the consequences of that decision was that the entire history of
abstract art was fractured and rendered incoherent as its various
phases were assigned to "subjects" that could rarely, if ever, be
discernible to the naked eye. The mistakes of 2000 have been repeated
in the permanent collection installation in 2004, according to Kramer.
In Kramer's opinion, the "subject galleries" in the new MoMA are works
of art that have been orphaned from history - from the esthetic history
from which they derive their ideas and from the history of their
influence on later works of art. All esthetic experience is
comparative, and the quality of our experience of individual works of
art often depends on the relation that obtains between the object
before us and our memories of other works of art. In such comparisons,
style rather than subject provides the principal linkage. This is one
reason the quality and character of installations in museum exhibitions
is so cruc | | |