MarkWork
ART & CULTURElittle boy and the scenic view
little boy … scenic view
Yesterday as I looked out at the Pacific Ocean I was struck with a heightened awareness of the many lost souls flying above the sea. It brought me back to an earlier conversation where I was reminded that over 80,000 people died in the course of an hour on August 6, 1945. Hiroshima and the American NUKE named ‘little boy’, the child of a bigger package named ‘Fat Man’. After processing this knowledge with some other facts I came across this week- over 42,000 Vietnamese have died because of left behind American land mines, this happened between 1976 (the end of the war) and 2005. All of this informed my every step of silence in a walking meditation. Allowing the many lost in the name of WARS pass thru me. I concluded the walk with this thought- Peace never killed a soul.
Later as I redirected my view a pang came over my core. Twitter brought down by hackers for nearly 24 hours and a slower version of facebook during the morning hours- ‘denial of access’ for all free beings looking for speed. Upon a closer look I found the president (lowercase for a reason) of Iran is being sworn in for a second term on the Koran and the million never showed.
As the day came to an end I scratched my head in disbelief that no media groups even spoke of the day ‘little boy’ was dropped by an American man flying over Japan. Is this why WARS go on? We don’t talk about them? This sounds a lot like my childhood in New England where we said very little and didn’t see that much change.
I hope that my little boy grows up learning a different understanding of the past, future and present. Yesterday gave me little HOPE. We should never live a breathing moment in FEAR. We need to shift this tide and slowdown. Start looking at the physical landscape closely and move forward with educated conversation on the future, without war and with a world connected by free communication.
WARS- Jeremy Deller and America
To follow is a letter I have had no luck sending over to Jeremy…
Hello Jeremy,
I enjoy the work very much and I find our approach and observations , at times, similar with to one another. One of the main differences being our citizenship; my being American and you British. Which as an artist is very important to the specifics and context of making work. You also have three years on me in the sixties but I have no less of a respect and inspiration for the entirety of the counter culture movement and its effect on us now.
The reason I was prompted to write you is the recent release I received on your project with CreativeTime, The New Museum and others- ‘It Is What It Is’ . It is perfectly timed and a great reminder for the fast moving American and all the media distractions around the economy which results in less coverage and reminders of the devastating wars going on. With this said my only question is why you don’t mention the involvement of the UK in this war? Seeing how you are British I know it is important to you, and I am amazed at your fascination with America but remember the wars wouldn’t have happened without the UK involvement; past, present and future. I hope this comes to surface more than once with your tour through the US. I also find it funny that you will not make it to the Bay Area with your project. What is the intention in this? Have they already been won over and need no prompted discussions around the current wars? I also wonder if you have done sufficient research to achieve the understanding that the greatest Middle Eastern populations exist in the Bay Area of California.
I am looking forward to seeing what kind of bats make it out of this cave.
All the best, Mark
FREE- Public Perception and Investment in US Public Art
Public Perception and Investment
The growth of public sculpture and installation has happened with private funding in the United States. The Public Art Fund in NYC has been doing amazing projects along all parts of the island of Manhattan and the fringes of its boroughs. The name would lead you to believe this is a publicly funded operation. It is not! The fall of the NEA lead to a major marriage between art and industry. The CEO’s of the industries also became the leading collectors of Art News profiles. Some of the biggest collectors and supporters have been: The Gap, Enron, Progressive Insurance, Citibank and plenty more. Yes the work landed in the public through the private funding of non profit projects in the public realm. The realization of many projects we have learned about have only been possible with large private investment. Yes the government partially supports some of the projects, but it was the overwhelming support from the private sector that supported a much larger percentage. It should also be noted that this same network of investors have been leaders on the boards of a great many museums in the US and abroad.
I find it funny that you blame the art press. They are guided by their advertising dollars and that comes in from the private sector. The main mission is to review current exhibitions in galleries, the related artists and concepts in the museums and the occasional profile on private collectors. The direction for exposure and critique is best left to groups like The New York Times. This is a solid network of informed journalists. If there is a lack of exposed public sculptures in the press, I believe it is because there have been few realized in the past decades. At this time there is a big paradigm shift and I will assure you that it will bring a great increase in exposure to brilliant public installations and sculptures.
Transformation- RAIN
A world set into motion. There is no longer time to sit around and watch your generation grow old. Now is the time to become the voice and action of change. We don’t know all that much. They killed the natives before understanding their keen sense of the land that they stole. Let us now ask questions and push up the stream that will sustainably filter our actions into a cleaner body of thought. Quality rots in the minds of the educated. They throw tradition in your face to quell the uprising. Tradition is based on knowing less then the present. Let us move beyond this. Compost your waste to gain an understanding of death. There is no need for gold when you have solar and wind. Remember all that surrounds us is part rock, air and water. It is that basic! Let us simplify our landscape and make for a multicultural community around unity, health and freedom.
Next Artist Colony- Mars
Next Artist Colony- Mars
Here we have another example of greed winning over culture. The artist as investor for a decade and then the government/developer comes in and sweeps them up and ushers in a “viable” landscape for the public of New Jersey. The artist pioneered this stagnant, toxic and post industrial enclave located on their shores. Only to witness the government and its guiding developers at work stripping it bare of all the history, recent and past, that brought this area to life. The next chapter is being written through the actions of knocking down old world mills and erecting generic high rise buildings that will rationalize the funds used to build the PATH train station. Why can’t New Jersey make a little preserve for the arts that put Jersey City in the minds of New Yorkers and New Jersey residence alike? Look at all the money and work they do for the sports industry. Is art any different? I feel this is another example of the artist in the post industrial landscape of cities. The artist does the best public relations for an area and then the developers thank them for the free services by wiping out their very existence- right down to the buildings.
LSD, LIFE and Death
Today I was astonished to find these two articles in front of my eyes and mind. Is it an example of profound accident or attention to awareness. I think both. Each article brings focus to death, the potential for change and the beauty in questioning and investigating life and death- one part art, science, nature and culture. Maybe 2008 will break out of the SAME and move to change. It is the two stories- one the death of Albert Hofman- inventor of LSD and the other is about artist Gregor Schneider.
International / Europe
http://www.nytimes.com/2008/04/30/world/europe/30hofmann.html?ex=1367294400&en=a90bf87d9f6eaa03&ei=5124&partner=permalink&exprod=permalink
There is nothing perverse about a dying person in an art galleryVilified for wanting to put death on display, the artist reveals the concept behind the controversy
Gregor Schneider
Saturday April 26, 2008
Guardian
For years, I have a dreamed of a room in which people can die in peace. It’s a simple room: flooded with light, with a wooden floor. It is a copy of a room I once saw at the Museum Haus Lange-Haus Esters in Krefeld, Germany; a marvellous piece of classically modern architecture that concentrates on the basics. I have recreated this room – as an artist, that is what I do – and at the moment, it is standing right here in my studio. Any minute it could be dismantled, put on a plane and reinstalled anywhere in the world, for someone nearing the end of their days and who wants to die in a humane and harmonious environment.
I’m not a naive person, but I don’t think there is anything wrong or perverse about this dream. I think it’s quite innocent. So it has been rather a shock to me that for the last week I have been receiving death threats by phone and email.
It started at the beginning of the week, when I mentioned my project about death and dying in an interview with a reporter from the Art Newspaper. I didn’t think much of it, as I have talked to curators about this at length since 1996, and there have been several mentions in exhibition catalogues.
The reporter was very interested and wrote an article about it. Two sentences from this article have been quoted repeatedly: “I want to display a person dying naturally in the piece or somebody who has just died. My aim is to show the beauty of death.”
I did say those things, and I still mean them. Of course I expected reactions. But I didn’t expect that quite so many publications would quote me without putting the statements into context. Within a few days, thousands of articles appeared across the world relying only on these two soundbites. In a way, I am not surprised that they have triggered some absolutely horrific images in the heads of journalists and readers. And yet I am still astonished by the nature of the comments I received, and disturbed by their vulgarity and violence. I received threats in multiple languages, some of them absurd, some of them seriously threatening.
Someone emailed to suggest I should be “slaughtered” and given “the Jesus treatment”. Someone else emailed: “Why don’t you kill your mother and show her to us while he’s [sic] dying?” Another told me my artworks were “degenerate”. The reaction in Britain has been more balanced – I guess people find it easier to talk and even laugh about death there. After Damien Hirst and the Young British Artists, perhaps they are more used to artists pushing a few boundaries as well.
The irony is that I have never been the type of artist who courts controversy for controversy’s sake. I was trained as a painter; my first exhibition of paintings was in 1985. Even back then I was fascinated by the portrayal of inner spaces in art: rooms you cannot enter, places that cannot communicate with the outside world. Gradually I realised that sculpture, and eventually architecture, enabled me to investigate this fascination in a more direct way. Nowadays I mainly build and recreate rooms.
Of course I am not the first artist who is interested in death as a subject. I doubt that those who call me “degenerate” would say the same about Michelangelo’s statue of David – and yet we know that Michelangelo used to cut up dead people to study their anatomy. Is that not much more shocking than what I am proposing to do?
I find the public portrayal of death on TV and on the internet violent and cruel; it lacks grace and respect for the human spirit. But I don’t think there is anything cruel in the reality of death in itself: there has to be more humane way of presenting it.
I think our culture needs to reinvestigate the way we deal with death. It has not just become a taboo, it is something that we actively try to push out of our daily lives. People used to die within the family. These days, many die in hospitals, locked away from the public.
From what I have seen with my own eyes, the conditions of dying in German hospitals are scandalously brutal and bleak. And it’s not much better in Britain. When I put on my installation about private spaces in two flats in east London in 2004, I used to have to walk past the Royal London Hospital in Whitechapel every morning. One day, I saw a woman who had escaped the hospital and was screaming as doctors were treating her on the road. Was it a humane place to die? I don’t think so.
My very first job as a teenager was with an undertaker, here in Reydt in the industrial west of Germany. I used to carry coffins from the church to the hole in ground. It was a well-paid job, mainly because no one wanted to do it. The other people I worked with were an alcoholic and a disabled man. It tells you something about the fear we have of death that we get the people at the bottom of the social ladder to handle our dead. Shouldn’t this last journey be the most intimate and personal journey in a person’s life?
More recently, I had first-hand experience with death when my father died. I wanted to give him a personal farewell, something that spoke of our relationship, so I wanted to design a personalised gravestone made of lead. It turned out to be nearly impossible: there are so many rules. In my view, the dying should be able to define the rituals and sites of their funeral themselves.
I grew up in a Catholic environment – I was even an acolyte in my local church for more than five years. My feeling is that the church used to provide us with rituals and ceremonies appropriate for death, but in a secular age, don’t we need to create our own?
For my project, I am not proposing that I would bring about someone’s death, or stage it. Nor am I suggesting that I would encourage someone who wants to take their own life. All I want to do is offer a room, a space in which they spend their last hours as they wish. Whether it is a public event or a private event, that is entirely up to them and their relatives.
I have also considered building a room for giving birth in. But I’m not sure there is much of a need for it; I have seen the sort of rooms people give birth in these days, and they are fine. Husbands are encouraged to take part in the process – everyone works together to make it a positive experience. I would like it if we can make a death a similarly positive experience.
Not all responses to my project have been negative. The Jesuit priest Friedhelm Mennekes has supported my project. He feels that there is a need to engage in a serious way with death, to show it as it really is. And there have been emails from people who have expressed interest in taking part. I don’t know if I will get back to these people yet, but the project will go ahead. There is one person in particular I could imagine working with. Of course, no one can tell when it will happen – that’s the deal with death.
To those who call me a coward for not putting myself up for the project, I would just like to say: when my time is up, I myself would like to die in one of my rooms in the private part of a museum. I live for my art, so I would like to die surrounded by art too. My aim would be to find a way of death that is beautiful and fulfilled: I couldn’t image a better place than a gallery to do so.
· Gregor Schneider was talking to Philip Oltermann. His exhibition, Doublings, is at the Museum Franz Gertsch in Burgdorf, Switzerland, until 15 June
guardian.co.uk © Guardian News and Media Limited 2008
Artist as TOOL
Brooklyn, NY is getting closer to sprouting its vision for the 21st century with a design by the international architecture/art star Frank Gehry. Gehry’s complex of buildings will amass housing, shopping and a sports arena. For the obvious reasons in America there will be no cultural component for the arts. One might argue they already have the Brooklyn Academy of Music and a museum anchored into the park. Isn’t this enough for the city who is second to that of Manhattan? I think differently, Brooklyn is the city that houses the most artists per acre of any soil on this planet! It is like the corn industry in the middle of America, once it took root, it has become infectious and grows like a weed. In New York it started at the first subway stop out of ‘the city’ and now it is at the tenth or more. People are trying to hold onto a certain neighborhood status even though they are over nine stops out of the real center.
In recent months I have been reading, from California, the horror and tragedy of certain artist occupied buildings in Brooklyn. No, the news never seems to break from a building in Manhattan because the high economy has helped push an exodus of the cultural producers(artists, writers, dancers, actors and designers) from the island over to the mainland of Brooklyn. Cheap rents, space, pioneering neighborhoods and a sense of community have attracted the shift. Soon Manhattan will be secured and occupied by the international portfolios of the super wealthy and the tourist. Sad as it seems it has become closer to the truth in just the two years since I have relocated from Brooklyn. The issue is getting the attention of the city government and they have formed teams and entertained meetings that try to understand the consequence of this plight.
Why do I go into this stuff? Well, it is based in a theory that I have concerning the artist as tool and I use tool in the most degrading way. After the success of Soho and then Tribeca, each have become valuable neighborhoods that artists originally pioneered, the developers got smart. The developer uses the artist as a bookmark and allows them the fiction of a few productive years in a post industrial loft space. During this time the renter usually has no heat or very little (business hours), cold water (that is likely positioned in the communal hall) and no conveniences on the street. If they build it, as artist triumphantly do, the rest will come. Wow! Does this not describe the last decade? The devastating conclusion to this NYC story is that the developers do not renew leases and start fixing everything from the sidewalk to the stand pipes and put it all up for sale.
The district of D.U.M.B.O. (down under the manhattan bridge overpass), Brooklyn turned overnight and now you can get chocolate from Jacque Torres and Starbuck’s coffee for the other hand. In the past you would not be lucky to find a quart of milk in this district. Yes this is a neighborhood with a few barriers(the expressway, Farragut projects and the East river) that prevent a scene like Willaimsburg from spilling so far out but it created what all developers would like to happen, demand over supply. Taking this into account I firm up my belief that this is the real future of New York City. ‘No man is an island’, cries out from my childhood, and I wonder if it is the artists that find the island for the man to take control over, and every step of the way the man hides behind the ‘good’ work they do for the arts? It definitely appears to be going this way and I think this can be viewed as a critique of the frantic art collecting going on currently with the contemporary art world. Here is an idea maybe they should start having art and design fairs in the neighborhoods these artists live? I then wonder who would be empowered by this sustainable way of creating an economy around the arts?
SAVE robert smithson’s spiral jetty, 1970
This is one of the worst examples of America caring for its public art. It brings sadness to my mind. Thinking…feeling the slightest chance this seminal work will be harmed. Think about the future for once America!
look at this site for more info- www.spiraljetty.org
my sent letter(please send yours)-
February 7, 2008
Jonathan Jemming
Public Lands Policy Analyst
Public Lands Policy Coordination Office
5110 State Office Building
Salt Lake City, Utah 84114
Via email: jjemming@utah.gov
RE: Application #8853
Dear Mr. Jemming,
I full heartedly object to anything happening in and around the seminal work Spiral Jetty by the artist Robert Smithson. This work should be cherished by the state of Utah and this includes its government officers. One would never propose to drill near the Washington Monument. I view this artwork as a comparable monument to a different era of American history. To further my objection I would like to bring Utah’s attention to the tragic death Robert Smithson had fall upon him and the consequence of this is a very limited body of completed public work. As a citizen of this country I plead with the state of Utah to find it within themselves to be a generous steward to a grand vision for all in the global landscape.
The Spiral Jetty brings me hope and inspiration. It is a work that has vision well beyond its time of creation. As the world turns to repairing itself from the destruction of 20th century industry, the Spiral Jetty reclaims that space in its beautiful location (Great Salt Lake) and presents the viewer with a glimpse of something bigger. Just as nature has allowed the Spiral Jetty to come back to its magnificence so should the state of Utah. Make a statement and allow the federal government the opportunity to preserve this truly spectacular piece of Land Art from the 20th century.
Sincerely,
MarkWork
let’s talk about WOOD…
I have not been able to shake the impression Martin Puryear’s survey show at MoMA, NYC had on me. I will first back up and describe that I have been educated by the 90’s art canon where youth and concept held vogue and the sculpted object and artists like Martin Puryear had many naysayers. I will set out in this essay to discuss the subjects of quality vs. quantity, craft, Conceptualism, authorship and sustainability.
Martin Puryear’s work contains a confidence in form and finish while allowing its completed state to hold on to the organic. It becomes ‘timeless’ without diluting its core natural state of rough textures, shaped dimensional boards and muted colors from the landscape . There is no reason not to place it on the same museum floor as Brancusi’s ‘Bird in Space’ and the Futurist’s ‘Running Man’. Puryear looks to the object to sum up the whole of culture and ones placement in the built landscape.
We are in the 21st century, one might proclaim, and I feel this makes Puryear’s work stronger. As current trends have been removing ‘Craft’ from the title of art colleges and museums in the United States. Puryear is able to hold the chisel and be relevent in contemporary culture. He confronts the ‘Walmart’ attitude of this country with his quality over quantity. His chisel cuts through the current climate of art as Marcel DuChamp did with his early urinal as readymade, both utilitarian tools sculpt humanity into a manageable, viewable form that takes hold of history and the exhibition space.
My complaint immediately upon leaving the exhibition was it had not shown many examples of what he has been doing since the early survey shows of the 80’s. Later I came to dismiss this on a couple of levels, one being my education around the arts compared to that of most museum visitors (especially at MoMA), also upon reflection it presents some of the issues concerning sustainability and authorship. Andy Warhol was prolific because he whole heartedly embraced commercialism and the appropriation of most things. Puryear spends his time differently. He understands the importance of sourcing the correct and sustainable material and other hours are spent sharpening the tools and understanding the species of wood. The work makes me feel he has an obligation to making a mark with his own hands, as an African American artist who is old enough to understand where his race has been and how important it is that he is able to use his hands for his own pursuits.
Less is More can have profound implications right now on the planet. It brings to mind a quality dinner that one sits down for hours to enjoy with company and slow savory food opposed to say the car seat experience of having a processed meal of fast food that you regret immediately after and for the years to come. Puryear’s exhibition taps directly into these concerns. It begins with the sparse installation and the varying sculptures (not drawings, photos or studies) that have been amassed across decades. The eye slows starting with the partially exposed process of the construction and then it follows the sculptures angles and turns and finally rests on the dense, muted colors of the finish. Time stops and Puryear’s work holds strong as evidence of progress in a nation, culture and planet.
GORE
A man who has brought the seed to the masses. The Noble Peace Prize is a well deserved award for the hard working, popularly elected president of 2000. Since this sad loss, he has crusaded like a champion for the things that matter most to the future of civilization. Power to the ever growing four letter word GORE!










