Greenberg Bests Rosenberg at the Jewish Museum

Finally caught up with "Action/Abstraction" at the Jewish Museum. A mostly well known group of abstract artists' work organized within a Harold Rosenberg vs Clement Greenberg frame. Unfortunately there's really no comparing the two critics. As I noted at Paddy's:

Rosenberg doesn’t have much of a reputation outside the art world, and his writing and theory is not as cogent as Greenberg’s. Rosenberg's "American Action Painters" essay is pretty much of a crock–-the artist as existential hero, but who must also be "serious" [i.e., not a mystic], gimme a break. Whereas Harvard modernism scholar Daniel Albright (a cross-disciplinary thinker) recently said of Greenberg’s "Towards a Newer Laocoon," which argues for separating media into areas of competence (or honesty, as Greenberg phrased it at that time): "in this essay Greenberg presents the finest statement I know of Modernist aesthetic purism."

Paired video loops of the two critics at the Jewish Museum tell the story. Greenberg talks about art after Cezanne being in some way responsive to or influenced by the rectangle that surrounds it, whereas Pollock worked on the floor to avoid this ingrained rhetorical limit. Rosenberg says nonsense along the lines of "Someone in England asked if you could have a slow action painting. I said that action painting can take an artist's entire life."

The intelligent theorizing of the former and the empty bloviating of the latter can be seen in quote after paired quote throughout the exhibit. A large chunk of the art world defined itself in opposition to Greenberg but that's because he offered something to oppose.

Pollock Guggenheim Mural

We're discussing the mural Jackson Pollock did for Peggy Guggenheim's home at Paddy Johnson's. An anonymous commenter from Iowa (where the painting now resides) is trash-talking certain aspects of its legend based on opinions of nameless experts. All very interesting but we're waiting for some actual evidence.

Twitney

Twitter notes on recent trip to Whitney Museum:

buckminster fuller show: tensegrity heaven, wall of buckyballs

the new, rigorous paul mccarthy: no fluids, no orgies, "critique of architecture"--weird museum-enabled self-revisionism

fritz glarner, burgoyne diller, leon polk smith, ellsworth kelly, mary heilman - whitney humor except it's not supposed to be funny

Holland Cotter on Peter Saul

Holland Cotter on Peter Saul (Times sign-in prob. required). One of Cotter's theses is that Saul is the Real Deal while Carroll Dunham and Elizabeth Murray got careers (to put it more bluntly than Cotter does). Check out the slide show: scrumptiously painted early work gives way to psychedelic boils and sores. Compare CO Itchee Bitchee, 1964, with Bush at Abu Ghraib, 2006, for examples of success and failure of politically-themed art.

More on Net Concrète

Comment from TH re the net concrète post:

"that net concrete thing just gets at that some people arent surfing
some of the time, they're skating... on net concrete"

Good point. The enemies of the surf clubs seized on that word "surf," with its connotations of couch potatoes holding a TV remote, to attack the work on the group websites as passive and mindless.

We all know that skating, on the other hand, carved into and "drew" the urban landscape, illuminating America's largely invisible architecture of schoolyards, plazas, and backyard swimming pools as a "massive cement playground of unlimited potential," as Craig Stecyk III wrote in the Dogtown articles. The group blogs similarly intervene into the largely unapprehended Net in an active, quasi-architectural way. Not through dismantling the code but through cogent choices and alterations of subject matter from the great "out there."