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Speccie The Masque of Art
George Simmers' fine entry deservedly won money. I knew it would. Bazza just missed out. I did not even enter, more shame on me.
All hail Autumnus! ’Tis the time of year To harvest blessings, for the Turner’s here, Purveying for us nothing like so quaint As canvases transformed by brush and paint, A thing for which old Turner gained much fame. But who, one asks, is Turner? Just a name. Instead, we have a video of a fire Relieved by artful puns on ‘choir’ and ‘quire’; A film about a dodgy Seventies sage Whose views on mental health were once the rage; A phantom city rendered in compression, Fruit of a ten-year doodling obsession; And four catsuited manikins, engaging In who-knows-what midst pantomimic staging. And that’s the Turner, a depressing musée Wherein no kind of refuse is refusée Noel Petty As taste depreciates and Mammon rules The fools of art revere the art of fools. They laud the unclad emperor of fashion, Exclaiming ‘fabulous!’ with witless passion Or parroting ‘it asks us “what is art?”’ While studying the artist’s bottled fart With rapt and solemn deference, thus showing They always scent which way the wind is blowing. The painter of tradition gets small thanks When wealth and fame accrue to mountebanks And bragging freaks, a meritless élite, Their only masterpiece the balance sheet. The art world strains to camouflage the trite: Reviewers, dealers, galleries unite To puff the latest fad, the cresting wave, While Turner turns, embarrassed, in his grave. G.M. Davis Where TURNER left us art ablaze with light, His claimant heirs burn tapers in the night; The judges, long accustom’d to the dark, Take any fancied glimmer for a spark. The four new rivals for the crowning bays Come garlanded ahead with fawning praise. All duly feign reluctance to compete, As each in turn displays a vain conceit. Here Noble draws on dreams, his world absurd With pencil’d ruins and his faithful turd. There Chetwynd, putting on her artless masque, Makes seeking wit or sense an idle task. While Price and Fowler in their flick’ring shows Chop others’ work to trade on others’ woes. Once more the Muse of what is fine in art Sighs deep to see that here she has no part. W.J. Webster For those who worship at the feet of Art, These recent times have meant a heavy heart. For first a jester, with apparent pride, Immers’d dead fauna in formaldehyde; A woman next shew’d her dishevell’d Bed, Containing items here best left unsaid; A third has since scarred Tyneside with a relic Of shapeless metal slabs, far from Angelic, And blighted Crosby beach in Perpetuity With egotistic structures of vacuity. A glance at what the Turner’s now selected Provokes one thought: how bad were those rejected? Scatology is here, of Art devoid; Madness and Death on o’erlong celluloid. What better comment on these ill-judg’d forays, Than Cicero’s ‘O tempora! O mores!’ Roger Theobald In serious conclave now the lords of Taste Compare the tenuous charms of works ungraced By any touch of wit or sign of craft, The null, the dull, the preening and the daft; This lady plays charades; this man draws turds Those two film videos too crass for words. The judges huddle to evaluate — But soft! A moaning echoes through the Tate! Great Turner’s shade howls out: ‘What tasteless joke Has linked my name to such dim tawdry folk? Oh who ordained this handing of my bays To artist-fools by critic-popinjays?’ Sweet ghost, these are not worthy of your rage; Think them the flotsam of a half-mad age When gulls pay millions for the worst of Hirst. Fret not. This is a bubble. It will burst. George Simmers But when to mischief pranksters turn their will How soon they find that fools admire their skill And gifted with the talent to annoy They court the Sage and piss on hoi polloi. So experts spring from rubbish raised to fame And praising turd and toilet make their name. They spit on Aphrodite and prefer The tragic sermon in a broken chair. Art for today puts plastic cups on show To take the Michel out of Angelo. By all means let us scoff to entertain And look for beauty in a stinking drain, Sicken spectators with a swarm of flies And call it thoughtful genius in disguise, Set piles of bricks and unmade beds apart To shock our sense — but do not call it Art. Frank McDonald |
Thanks, John. I'm feeling very pleased with myself. But I hope that the print edition sets out lines 7 and 8 properly.
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Whoops! Let me speed to see what I can do. Tsk! Tsk! Ah! Job done. Congratulations yet again, George. You must be top of the averages for the last month or so.
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Not your fault, John - it's like that on the Speccie website, too. Thanks for adjusting, though.
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This was a toughie and I chickened out too, like John.
RESPECT, George! All the entries are excellent but big congrats to you for being the sole spherean. Jayne |
Thanks, Jayne.
Actually, I felt a bit guilty about this one, since it goes a bit against my principles to write a slating review of an exhibition I'd not seen (even though that was the premise of the comp). So, being in London for a few days, and wanting to see the pre-Raphaelite exhibition at Tate Britain, I was glad to discover that if I got a two-show ticket, seeing the Turner would hardly cost anything. So were my insults justified? Paul Noble, the one who draws and sculpts turds, has draughtsman's skills, but seems to have nothing to say. The two video works are pretty bad. Both take existing film footage, and chop it up for sensational, disorienting effect. Elizabeth Price's is like a pretentious pop video, with banal phrases occasionally superimposed on the pictures. Luke Fowler's takes a potentially interesting subject - the ideas of R.D.Laing - and desn't do it justice. The really silly one, though, is the performance work of Spartacus Chetwynd. Two people, dressed like bits of forest, bob around with a puppet that is supposed to be a mandrake root. Selected members of the audience are pulled up to speak to the puppet, and it whispers secrets to them. I wasn't selected, maybe because I was giggling. It's really bad. Ms Chetwynd seems to embrace an amateur aesthetic which excuses her from being any good at puppetry. Her bio contains one of those sentences that make a parodist despair of ever catching up with the absurdity of reality: 'She lives and works in a nudist colony in South London.' So I don't feel guilty now. And if I'd seen the show before I wrote the piece, I'd have been considerably more scathing. |
However there is an upside. The name Spartacus Chetwynd is itself an art work.
My name is Spartacus Chetwynd. People who meet me generally get wind... Could I enter that couplet as the first artwork in the Salon Des Refuses? |
And my cat, who like me is called "Spartacus",
Is renowned as a terrible farter-puss. |
It's the way that you tell' em, Brian.
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