David Cohen at Artcritical
March 9, 2001
Academy Notes
INVITATIONAL EXHIBITION OF PAINTING
AND SCULPTURE, American Academy of Arts and Letters, New York City
Nicole Eisenman Fishing 2000
oil on board 43x56 inches, Collection of Craig and Ivelin Robins, Miami
Beach, FL (courtesy Jack Tilton Gallery, New York)
Bouvard and Pécuchet
pretty much had the right idea about academies. Never miss an opportunity
to ridicule them, and never turn down an invitation to join! My own
"received idea" about Salon-type exhibitions is largely informed
by London's Royal Academy of Arts which every year delights ladies in
tweed (plaid) from the Home Counties and embarrasses the artworld with
that time-honored ritual, the Summer Exhibition. Academicians, already
an odd-enough cocktail, add to the brew of their own eclecticism by
opening their august walls to other talents, new or old. Nothing can
be more calculated to offend a modernist sensibility than the double-
and triple- hangs with a resulting visual cacophony that typify the
RA Show and the comparable Salons (de Mai, d'Automne etc.) arranged
periodically at the Grand Palais in Paris and indeed anywhere where
exhibiting societies of yore survive. Post-modernists generally find
cooler ways to overturn the applecart of modernist purism than throwing
in their lot with these meat markets (though one year, as it happens,
YBA Michael Landy did submit a market stall to the RA where it held
pride of place under a rotunda). Anyhow, this is all by way of introduction
to the totally unexpected positive feelings engendered in me by this
year's "Invitational" exhibition at the American Academy of
Arts and Letters.
I don't know what others do when they
receive an invitation with thirty-eight names on them, but in a mix
of curiosity and vanity I like to circle any acquaintances, and to my
astonishment, when this particular card arrived on my desk I soon found
a baker's dozen of haloed names. These were all artists I admired and
respected; yet in my wildest dreams I would only curate them into one
exhibit as a Surrealist gesture. A sewing machine and an umbrella are
more likely to meet on a dissecting table than Melissa Meyer, Chakaia
Booker, Amy Sillman, and Martha Diamond to exhibit together in glorious,
top-lit nineteenth-century galleries in a complex of like-buildings
floating as incongruously amid the northern reaches of Harlem as the
Taj Mahal in modern Agra. But that's exactly what's going on at the
Academy's Art Galleries at Audubon Terrace at Broadway between 155 and
156 Streets til April 1. For those of us - shame on us! - who have never
ventured to this neighborhood before, the delights of Velázquez
and Goya and much else await at the Hispanic Society of America next
door.
Of course, the Invitational follows
hot on the heels of those bazaars, the Armory and Pier shows, so New
Yorkers may still have the magpie sensibility needed to extract aesthetic
experience from the quagmire of overload. I should say, however, that
the Academy show is installed with remarkable dignity considering the
number of artists included, and the depth given to each artist. The
sculptor Lucky DeBellevue is given better opportunity to do his thing
here than he was in the encyclopedic "Greater New York" show
at P.S.1 in Queens last year. His exquisite mesh of chenille stems in
the suspended canopy The Underneath made for a magisterial entrance
to the South Gallery. A heightened sense of nature versus artifice is
sustained as the visitor turns left, to find, framed by an alcove, a
sumptuous Ena Swansea shadow painting. The annex revealed a new artist
to me: Justen Ladda, whose sensationally crafted Tree of Knowledge in
glass crystal beads- knowingly, wickedly kitschy - is sorely tempting.
On a similarly lapsarian note, it
struck me on this occasion that Nicole Eisenman's slick, slippery, mannerist
panel paintings of mean, muscley ice-maidens (which I had actually seen
already at the Jack Tilton Gallery, but needed a second viewing to be
convinced by) could be the work of Adam Elsheimer angry ex-wife, Lilith!
Fishing, 2000 (borrowed from a Miami Beach collection) I have now decided
is a masterpiece. The gleeful, girlish illustrational quality of this
image, of a surly sisterhood lounging around in tight catsuits on Giotto-like
icy hillocks and presiding over the dunking of a hapless Acteon (hoisted
- literally - by his own petard) compounds rather than distracts from
the intensity of the whole. Sure, this is Bad Painting with a capital
B, but there is real aesthetic communication here, not just art about
art, which is why, in my opinion, Eisenman leaves John Currin and Lisa
Yuskavage out in the cold (it's Nicole who really "breaks the ice"!).
The tight contorted awkwardness sits well with the erotic energy experienced
by painter and viewer alike in this Rubenesque paean to voluptuous girl-power.
But enough... this review is about to get X-rated!
Seriously, though, you can see the
problem with a Salon review. There are thirty-eight artists here, and
I'd like to talk in similar depth about, say, twenty-four of them. It's
tempting to delve into the revelations that arise from the juxtaposition
of artists from totally different milieus. I love the way Jacqueline
Humphries's sparse, sleek drip paintings, commentaries on, as much as
essays in, abstraction are on the other side of a wall with Charles
Cajori's sweaty AbEx figural abstractions, as if to say, here are two
sides of one coin. And it is interesting how, out of the icebox of Mary
Boone's uptown gallery, Will Cotton's high-end kitsch ice-cream paintings
melt into the hokey academic still lives by Nancy Hogan hanging next
to them. But still, there is no group aesthetic, no zeitgeist that I'm
smart enough to discern. I guess this is why there's never an effective
equivalent of Ruskin's Academy Notes or Baudelaire's Salon Reviews for
the Whitney Biennial or the Venice Biennale, the modern equivalents
of those sprawling old fixtures. So, I can't actually review the American
Academy of Arts and Letters Invitation Exhibition of Painting and Sculpture.
But I certainly can recommend it.
Exhibition continues to April 1, 2001