The Art of Art
The Art of Art
The Art of Art
Where's the
The eye is attuned to the natural world, or at least, in our
industrial age, what's out there. When we experience art, we want
something different, something worked upon. Seeing a few pieces of
driftwood on a mat, or a cobblestone in a corner of the gallery, raises
an obvious complaint. It isn't transformed enough from raw materi-
als. Art, linked to artificial, should show some effort toward imposed
design or pattern; otherwise, it's either nature or chaos. Natural
design may show beautymost people admire a rainbowbut it's
nature, not art.
Galef I 123
That's Ugly
But what should artistic technique deliver? Something that
gives joy? How should one respond to a man in front of a misshapen
vase that looked as if a kindergartner had sat on it, when the man
whispers to his companion, "That's ugly." Must art be beautiful?
No, in the sense that Picasso's Guernica is also grotesque, or that
Joseph Cornell's boxes, whatever else they are, are desperate stays
against disorder and testaments to loneliness. But there must be some
aesthetic payoff, or else the work should be shelved under sociology,
anthropology, or simply propaganda. Sorhething in the arrangement
should please or at least contain an essential rightness, even if born
from distortion. The question is how to define that, against the vast
array of possible responses to a work of art. How can one explain
that some works in the museum may appear monstrous?
The audience's outrage once meant that the art had failed, whereas
now it's regarded as the sine qua non of the avant-garde. Roger Fry's
post-Impressionist exhibit in 1910 infuriated contemporary critics,
just as Impressionism bedeviled audiences a generation earlier.
Experimental art often excites such a reaction, though eventually
the culture may catch up with it. The critic Anatole Broyard noted
that, if the art still seems experimental after fifty years, it means the
experiment failed. Those with little sense of art history are often
handicapped in judging what's new. The sculpture is distorted; it's
strange; the picture is inaccurate; there's no picture at all. Abstract is
usually harder to grapple with than concrete, in any event.
Art makes one think, but through some sort of aesthetic register-
ing, as opposed to the way, say, a math textbook provokes one to
think. If the art is ugly, it may provoke disgust, which is also an
aesthetic response, but if the reaction is merely aversive, that's not
Galef I 127
What's It Meanl
Strictly figurative painting, such as a canvas v^ith a pack of
baying hounds called The Hunt, is easy to figure out. But what about
a Max Ernst canvas like The Robing of the Bride, with its nudes and
their impossibly long hair, and that sinister green swan man, a broken
arrow in his hand? When someone wants to know what a picture
like that means, I'm tempted to mutter something about the sexual
act or intone a line from Archibald MacLeish's "Ars Poetica": "A
poem should not mean but be." Art should convey more than one
possible interpretation, or else it's propagandabut then why do some
people acclaim certain advertisements as art, with the Clio awards
for the best ones? Is Leni Riefenstahl's film Triumph of the Will,
celebrating Hitler as a demigod, a work of art? It's agitprop done with
artistry. These are examples of art in the service of commerce or war,
a tradition with a lineage as long as the patronage of art. Maybe one
should give such an artist less credit, but not for working within a
circumscribed sphere, since all art entails working within some con-
straints, and not until after the Renaissance did some artists make a
living without working on commission. As with so many of these
issues, it's a question of degree: all art is directed, but if the direction
is too obvious, it may spoil the interplay between art and audience.
On the other side of the spectrum is the problem of abstract art:
shapes and colors without any direct figurative equivalent. Abstract
expressionism at least affords the freedom of free association, as
in lying on one's back to interpret cloud masses. Picasso, who was
far too sophisticated to reject these movements, nonetheless asked
of such canvases, "But where's the drama?" Music without words
is usually abstract, except on the level of mimicking, say, a bird,
but sculpture and painting have for millennia concentrated on
mimesis, the reproduction of nature. The emergence of non-repre-
sentational depiction led the philosopher Arthur C. Danto to declare
the end of art.
128 I Southwest Review
but the very act of presenting it as his own has made it a different
work. The artist Sherrie Levine made a feminist statement hy devel-
oping negatives from famous dead male photographers and signing
the results with her signature, thus appropriating their work and, in
a Marxist mode, taking over the means of production while calling
attention to its usual maleness. Whether such an act makes for in-
teresting art or merely an interesting discussion is another matter.
But the prohlem of originality is more vexed than that. True original-
ity either doesn't quite exist or is exceedingly rare. Rather, originality
is recomhinant: two or more familiar elements put together in a strik-
ingly different way, as with Dali's ants and watches. Juxtaposition is
all we get in some of today's art: a refrigerator flanked hy a tank, for
instance. To cite Donald Barthelme again: Collage is the art of the
twentieth century.
Good art has something new about it, whether it's in subject, pre-
sentation, juxtaposition, context, or something else. Bad art has none
of the preceding. And then there's the situation where an artist makes
a reputation hy reproducing the same kind of art over and over. In
this age of specialization, it's hard to fault a professional for taking
this track, and a career should he judged hy its hest work, hut there is
something to he said for versatility.
some weight. The art critic Hilton Kramer, for instance, seems never
to have made his peace with this issue, pointing out that a lot of
what's hanging in galleries is sanctified drek.
But postmodernists don't believe in absolute standards and learn to
live with arbitrary, relative props. They show that what is often taken
for inherent structure is really just agreed-upon convention. Back in
the Sixties, Danto put forth the provocative statement that it's art if
it's exhibited in an art museum, expanded upon by the aesthetic phi-
losopher George Dickie into what he termed the institutional theory
of art, wherein the institution deems what's art-worthy.
But institutional considerations will never replace the one-on-one
meeting between the art work and an individual, where most inter-
fering context has drifted away to leave an admirer communing with
the object of his enchantment. The institutional theory of art doesn't
account for why, on the way home from a museum, I spied a piece of
bric-a-brac made from colored glass and wire that almost took my
breath away, though it was deposited next to a trash can. Some com-
mentators have suggested that an aesthetic frame of mind is all that's
required to turn anything into an artwork, but that doesn't explain
why some stuff similar to the bric-a-brac, sitting right next to it, did
nothing for me.
The Audience
of course, art by itself does nothing. If a tree falling in a forest
with no one to hear it presents a philosophical conundrum, what's a
work of art without someone to appreciate it? Art is in the eye of the
beholder. The art-viewing public doesn't generally create art, but it
lends it its status as art. Or certain tastemakers do, but the idea is
the same: no opinion, no art. To some extent, this argument parallels
the reader-response theory of literature that grew up in the Seventies
and Eighties, wherein the reader and the writer together produce a
textual reading. Once the author lets go of the text, it's up for grabs.
The radical end of reader-response theory postulates that Donne's
holy sonnets are mere squiggles on the page until the reader ekes
meaning out of them. Understandably, most artists object to such
sharing of the artistic production.
I Southwest Review
Coda
It's easy to grow judgmental over pieces that resemhle, say, a
limp Slinky (laheled Spring] or what looks like uninspired canvas-
dauhing. Herein lies the prohlem of had art: It contains all the ele-
ments one could wish in art, hut done in an inferior manner
inaccurate proportions in the sculpture, hadly mixed colors, the ideas
animating it a hopeless collection of cliches. Or had art is mere tech-
nique (and prohahly had technique, at that), lacking imagination.
So what separates art from not-quite-art? Mayhe a failure of the imagi-
nation. But there are always those who might imagine it otherwise.