Monday, March 31, 2014

The Emperor’s Tailors Strike Again...



Or, how I learned to stop worrying and love the art world (in a grocery store)




Once again I must shake off negative vibes due to members of art world and media once again oohing and aahing over an exhibition I really wish just was not there. No, I am not a critic so not naming names, I am sure there are several just in Manhattan that fit the bill actually, but as a lifelong lover of art, an awestruck admirer of artists, and what they can do, it pains me that the viewing public is being what I strongly feel is misled, and encouraged to make poor judgments, about the nature of art being made today.

As writers and exhibitors of art, we take on the responsibility of deciding what people will see. If those getting their feet wet in the art scene turn a blind eye to all the good that is out there because we showed them the first work they saw for the wrong reasons, we are damaging the present and future of art – if no one buys from artists, how can they go on? Can the market afford any more losses? More important, can humanity afford to lose the vision of great artists?

My main issue with the work I saw was simple – it represented an attempt, albeit an almost technically perfect one, to communicate in a way that others (I immediately thought of 2 artists I know personally) are doing better with less notoriety. By successfully I mean that the technical ability is there to make the difficulty of their choices transparent to the viewer, providing an experience of seamless enjoyment and understanding of highly personal work that, while edgy, also flaunts an irresistible beauty, and elicits an immediate reaction of “Wow!”

You should love a piece of art because someone has done something remarkable and irreplaceable and it has opened a door in your life. You should not embrace art because someone else thinks you should, no matter what that someone’s name is, and you should not dismiss all art just because others say you are supposed to like something that you know just sucks.

As in "The Emperor's New Clothes," Andersen’s cautionary tale of a vain emperor conned into parading about naked, sometimes it takes an innocent to call attention to a fallacy that those entangled in the system fear to point out. My epiphany came several years ago, while checking out in Trader Joe’s. A youthful cashier was making pleasant conversation as he packed my groceries, but when I told him I wrote about art he came to a dead stop, looked me right in the eyes and asked:

“Why is all the art in Chelsea so bad?”

It isn’t, of course, but there are always enough dubious presentations to give would-be art lovers like this young man pause. And we all pay a price for that, the viewers who don’t get to see the best, and the great artists who get lumped in with the less talented and inspired simply because they do not have the means or political pull or desire to forcefully push to the front of the pack.

Another caution, just got an email from a suburban gallery with lovely images of work that is simply highly commercial and decorative, often these objects are fabricated for the artists. Saving this for another post, but décor is something you can create yourself with objects from many sources and you can obtain them without paying a high cost for those objects and have fun doing, and re-doing, it. Art is a living offering of love and insight that exists in your space to have an intimate and dynamic relationship with you. Before acquiring an object that matches the sofa from the nearest storefront, please look at what is out there in terms of cost and value.  When I speak with people about this they are often dismayed to learn that they could have made a purchase from a significant body of work in an artist’s own hand for what they spent on something they will probably toss in a couple of years or give away on Craigslist.

One thing I really hate seeing is an artist with a gallery and following presenting a new concept in their work that someone else has been doing better for a while. It starts to feel like art is a closed shop union for those who are already making money or can buy in to publicize themselves, and we all know that is not healthy for the future of art. Great artists, famous or not, struggle and reach and dig to find the next vein to mine, and it pays off in highly original and soulful work that is new yet unmistakably theirs. I feel sad walking into a show of new works and thinking, “Hey, that looks like…”

Artists never give up. You should not either, keep searching and looking and walking through those gallery doors. Something is waiting for you, it just may, like true love, take time and commitment.

Q arranges private and group studio and gallery events featuring a very select group of artists, to join please contact me at beauartsltd@gmail.com and tell me about the art you dream of… Linda