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Unread 06-15-2023, 12:50 PM
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Rick Mullin Rick Mullin is offline
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Oh, and here's another thing. I have for some time lamented the system that is bringing up museum and gallery curators. As I alluded to above, it is increasingly a matter of science (which, again, sells in contemporary culture). Go to an exhibit, and there will be x-rays next to paintings. The catalog of a Soutine exhibit at a gallery in New York a few years ago had a catalog entirely about how our brains react to art. The Times wrote up the exhibit based on the catalog and a few goofy anecdotes about Soutine.

I'm worried about the art history, history, and ...art curricula, as I am about all non-STEM or what is now called humanities curricula. But coming up on the fast track, apparently, we have entertainers, comedians with no understanding of even science. Exhibits comparable to this Pablomatic thing will pop up everywhere. And people who have a feeling and ideas about the art they study will have a hard time getting a gig.

Last edited by Rick Mullin; 06-15-2023 at 12:55 PM.
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Unread 06-15-2023, 01:00 PM
Jim Moonan Jim Moonan is offline
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Originally Posted by W T Clark View Post
Rick, you have met the person who has read all their free article all the time: the most, unfortuntately paywalled person in the world! Is there any chance you could copy and paste the article(s) into a comment?

Here it is Cameron... Not sure how it will fall on the page... I edited out advertisements, etc.


PABLOMATIC

With Hannah Gadsby’s ‘It’s Pablo-matic,’ the Joke’s on the Brooklyn Museum
The Australian comedian turns curator in a show about Picasso’s complicated legacy. But it’s women artists the exhibition really shortchanges.


By Jason Farago
Published June 1, 2023
Updated June 6, 2023
If you studied art history or another of the humanities in the 1990s or 2000s — say, if you are around the age of the Australian comic Hannah Gadsby, 45 — you may remember the word “problematic” from your long-ago seminar days. Back then it was a voguish noun, borrowed from French, that described the unconscious structure of an ideology or a text. Soon, though, like so many other efforts to think critically, “the problematic” got left behind in this century’s great shift from reading to scrolling. These days we encounter “problematic” exclusively as an adjective: an offhand judgment of moral disapproval, from a speaker who can’t be bothered by precision.

A whole cast of professional art workers — conservators, designers, guards, technicians — has been roped in to produce “It’s Pablo-matic: Picasso According to Hannah Gadsby,” a small exhibition opening Friday at the Brooklyn Museum. (It is a title so silly that I cannot even type it; I am cutting and pasting.) The show, one of many worldwide timed to the 50th anniversary of the Spanish artist’s death in 1973, is essentially a light amusement following on from “Nanette,” a Netflix special from 2018. In that routine, a sort of blend of stand up and TED Talk, Gadsby riffed on having “barely graduated from an art history degree,” at the bachelor’s level, and attempted a takedown of the Spanish artist: “He’s rotten in the face cavity! I hate Picasso! I hate him!” Now this entertainer has come through the museum doors, but if you thought Gadsby had something to say about Picasso, the joke — the only good joke of the day, in fact — is on you.

Like the noun-turned-adjective “problematic,” this new exhibition backs away from close looking for the affirmative comforts of social-justice-themed pop culture. At the Brooklyn Museum you will find a few (very few) paintings by Picasso, plus two little sculptures and a selection of works on paper, suffixed with tame quips by Gadsby on adjacent labels. Around and nearby are works of art made by women, almost all made after Picasso’s death in 1973; finally, in a vestibule, clips from “Nanette” play on a loop. That’s the whole exhibition, and anyone who was expecting this to be a Netflix declension of the Degenerate Art Show, with poor patriarchal Picasso as ritualized scapegoat, can rest easy. There’s little to see. There’s no catalog to read. The ambitions here are at GIF level, though perhaps that is the point.
Image
At left, a painting of a nude Black woman on a sofa; next to it is a painting of a woman warrior whose headpiece is made from recycled mini flag poles; at right is a partial image of Marilyn Minter’s “Big Girls.”
The exhibition also features works by women artists drawn from the Brooklyn Museum collection. From left, “Marie: Nude Black woman lying on a couch (Marie: Femme noire nue couchée)” by Mickalene Thomas; “Revolutionary Sister” by Dindga McCannon; and “Big Girls” by Marilyn Minter.Credit...Vincent Tullo for The New York Times

So far as it has an argument — a problematic — it goes like this: Pablo Picasso was an important artist. He was also something of a jerk around women. And women are more than “goddesses or doormats,” as Picasso brutally had it; women, too, have stories to tell. I wish there was more to inform you of, but that’s really about the size of it. All the feminist scholarship of the last 50 years — about repressed desire, about phallic instability, or even just about the lives of the women Picasso loved — is put to one side, in favor of what really matters: your feelings. “Admiration and anger can coexist,” a text at the show’s entrance reassures us.

That Picasso, probably the most written about painter in history, was both a great artist and a not-so-great guy is so far from being news as to qualify as climate. What matters is what you do with that friction, and “It’s Pablo-matic” does not do much. For a start, it doesn’t assemble many things to look at. The actual number of paintings by Picasso here is just eight. Seven were borrowed from the Musée Picasso in Paris, which has been supporting shows worldwide for this anniversary; one belongs to the Brooklyn Museum; none is first-rate. There are no other institutional loans besides a few prints brought over the river from MoMA. What you will see here by Picasso are mostly modest etchings, and even these barely display his stylistic breadth; more than two dozen sheets come from a single portfolio, the neoclassical Vollard Suite of the 1930s.

Unsigned texts in each gallery provide basic invocations of gender discrimination in art museums, or the colonial legacy of European modern art, while next to individual works Gadsby offers signed banter. These labels function a bit like bathroom graffiti, or maybe Instagram captions. Beside one classicizing print of Picasso and his lover Marie-Thérèse Walter: “I’m so virile my chest hair just exploded.” Beside a reclining nude: “Is she actually reclining? Or has she just been dropped from a great height?”

There’s a fixation, throughout, on genitals and bodily functions. Each sphincter, each phallus, is called out with adolescent excitement; with adolescent vocabulary, too. What jokes there are (“Meta? Hardly know her!”) remain juvenile enough to leave Picasso unscathed. The adults involved at the Brooklyn Museum (principally its senior curators Lisa Small and Catherine Morris, Gadsby’s collaborators here) really could have reined in this immaturity, though to their credit, they’ve at least fleshed out the show with some context on the cult of male genius or the rise of feminist art history in the 1970s.
Editors’ Picks

The trouble is obvious, and entirely symptomatic of our back-to-front digital lives: For this show the reactions came first, the objects reacted to second. A show that started with pictures might make you come to wonder — following the pioneering feminist art historian Linda Nochlin — why Picasso’s paintings of women are generally lacking in desire, quite unlike the pervy paintings of Balthus, Picabia and other cancelable midcentury gents. A show properly engaged with feminism and the avant-garde might have turned to Lyubov Popova, Natalia Goncharova, Nadezhda Udaltsova or Olga Rozanova: the remarkable Soviet women artists who put Picasso’s breakdown of forms in the service of political revolution. A more serious look at reputation and male genius might have introduced a work by at least one female Cubist: perhaps Alice Bailly, or Marie Vassilieff, or Alice Halicka, or Marie Laurencin, or Jeanne Rij-Rousseau, or María Blanchard, ​ or even Australia’s own Anne Dangar.

Instead, “It’s Pablo-matic” contents itself to stir in works by women from the Brooklyn Museum collection. These seem to have been selected more or less at random, and include a lithograph by Käthe Kollwitz, a photograph by Ana Mendieta, an assemblage by Betye Saar, and Dara Birnbaum’s “Technology/Transformation: Wonder Woman,” a video art classic of 1978/79 whose connection to Picasso is beyond me. (At least two paintings here, by Nina Chanel Abney and Mickalene Thomas, draw on the example of Manet, not Picasso.) The artists who made them have been reduced here, in what may be this show’s only true insult, into mere raconteurs of women’s lives. “I want my story to be heard,” reads a quotation from Gadsby in the last gallery; the same label lauds the “entirely new stories” of a new generation.

This elevation of “stories” over art (or at least comedy) was the principal thrust of “Nanette,” a Sydney stand-up routine which became an American viral success during the last presidency, shortly after the wrongdoings of Harvey Weinstein were finally exposed. “Nanette” proposed a therapeutic purpose for culture, rejecting the “trauma” of telling jokes in favor of the three-act resolution of “stories.” It directly analogized Picasso to then-President Trump: “The greatest artist of the twentieth century. Let’s make art great again, guys.” It even averred that Picasso, and by extension all the old masters, suffered from “the mental illness of misogyny.” (Given this pathologization of Picasso, it is very intriguing that Gadsby has described the Brooklyn Museum show as their own deeply desired act of sexual violence against the man from Málaga, telling Variety: “I really, really want to stick one up him.”)


Most bizarrely, the routine rested on a condemnation of art as an elite swindle, and modernism got it particularly hard. “CUUU-bism,” went Gadsby’s mocking refrain, to reliable audience laughter. (As it is, Picasso’s own Cubist art appears at the Brooklyn Museum through a single 6-by-4.5-inch engraving.) The sarcasm, from a comedian with moderate art historical bona fides, had a purpose: It gave Gadsby’s audience permission to believe that avant-garde painting was actually a big scam. “They’re all cut from the same cloth,” Gadsby told the audience in “Nanette”: “Donald Trump, Pablo Picasso, Harvey Weinstein” — and the art you never liked in the first place could be dismissed as the flimflam of a cabal of evil men.

Not long ago, it would have been embarrassing for adults to admit that they found avant-garde painting too difficult and preferred the comforts of story time. What Gadsby did was give the audience permission — moral permission — to turn their backs on what challenged them, and to ennoble a preference for comfort and kitsch.

So who should be most brassed off by this show? Not Picasso, who gets out totally unharmed. But the women artists in the museum’s collection dragooned into this minor prank, and the generations of women and feminist art historians — Rosalind Krauss, Anne Wagner, Mary Ann Caws, hundreds more — who have devoted their careers to thinking seriously about modern art and gender. Especially at the Brooklyn Museum, whose engagement with feminist art is unique in New York, I left sad and embarrassed that this show doesn’t even try to do what it promises: put women artists on equal footing with the big guy.

“My story has value,” Gadsby said in “Nanette”; and then, “I will not allow my story to be destroyed”; and then, “Stories hold our cure.” But Howardena Pindell, on view here, is much more than a storyteller; Cindy Sherman, on view here, is much more than a storyteller. They are artists who, like Picasso before them, put ideas and images into productive tension, with no reassurance of closure or comfort. The function of a public museum (or at least it should be) is to present to all of us these women’s full aesthetic achievements; there is also room for story hour, in the children’s wing.

It’s Pablo-matic: Picasso According to Hannah Gadsby
June 2 through Sept. 24, the Brooklyn Museum, 200 Eastern Parkway, Brooklyn; (718) 638-5000, brooklynmuseum.org.
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Unread 06-15-2023, 01:05 PM
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Rick Mullin Rick Mullin is offline
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Thanks for doing this, Jim. And sorry, Cameron. I had intended to get around to it.

Jim do the other one too, please ~,:^)

In related recent news was the Fearless Girl statue, which I've written about here before. When the statue was placed in front of the bull statue on Broadway in the Financial District, it telescoped perception of a work of public art into a single, political and social interpretation. It assigned meaning, and for many people defined the sculpture. It weaponized a work of art in the culture wars--talk about appropriation! The artist was heartbroken that this took place. Then he died. Thankfully, they moved Fearless Girl to the front door of the New York Stock Exchange, where she confronts the temple of capitalism. This is much more appropriate and impactful. It's not a prank anymore.
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Unread 06-15-2023, 01:16 PM
Julie Steiner Julie Steiner is offline
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FWIW I, too, was glad when the Fearless Girl statue was moved, so that she challenged a building/institution rather than another work of art.

I'm not so sure that this exhibition is a flash in the pan, Jim. I mean, the "It's Pablo-matic" exhibition itself is, but if it allows the Brooklyn Museum to make buckets of money despite having so few actual Picassos on view, I'm sure other institutions will rush to try something similar.

A lot of us here have written throwaway poems riffing on various works of art, but we don't actually take a few thousand square feet of prime gallery space from more informed points of view when we present our gut reactions.

Still thinking about this, I guess. I reserve the right to change my mind.

Last edited by Julie Steiner; 06-15-2023 at 01:30 PM.
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Unread 06-15-2023, 01:28 PM
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That's the horror here, Julie. The Brooklyn Museum can be spoken of in the same breath as the Guggenheim if not the big museums in New York, Boston, Washington, and St. Louis. This has happened at the Brooklyn Museum. What if a late nite comedian were to present something like this at the National Gallery in London? It's cultural decimation perpetrated by people who think they have the virtue market cornered. Gadsby has no notion of art. Shame on the Brooklyn Museum. This is worse the the Vigin Mary with the elephant shit thing. A lot worse.
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Unread 06-15-2023, 12:40 PM
James Brancheau James Brancheau is offline
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"I don't see much difference between barring crassly misogynistic comedians from university campuses and barring crassly feminist comedians from museums."

I think you are framing this the way you want, Julie. Crass, and misogynistic don't enter into it. College teachers are on pins and needles because of pronouns these days. Not exactly an Andrew Dice Clay thing here. And, btw, I loathed him. Partly because of that, and mostly because he wasn't funny. And yet, he's working his way into high-profile movies... Anyway, once again, it's the work, the work, the work. Don't care if he was an ax murderer.
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Unread 06-15-2023, 01:02 PM
Julie Steiner Julie Steiner is offline
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James, I thought the only college professors likely to get into trouble over pronouns are the ones who intentionally keep applying the ones that a student has repeatedly asked them not to. Am I wrong?

I have a gender-neutral person in my family, and I constantly get their pronouns wrong (mainly due to my brain's difficulties with plural/singular dissonance). Fortunately, they don't expect me to be perfect. Just willing to keep trying, and not treat something that matters a great deal to them as if it's just a trivial whim that is rudely inconveniencing me just for the sake of rudely inconveniencing me. Others' mileage may vary, though.
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Unread 06-15-2023, 01:15 PM
Jim Moonan Jim Moonan is offline
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Quote:
Originally Posted by James Brancheau View Post
... Anyway, once again, it's the work, the work, the work. Don't care if he was an ax murderer.
Ax murderer? Picasso? Wait! So that's the subscript to Guernica! (Btw, I agree with you, James. The world has become a dangerous place to create art.)

Regarding the harsh climate within which art creation exists today, is it possible that "this, too, will pass" and the pendulum will swing? (Or will AI stamp out that, too?)

Regarding PABLOMATIC, I think this is flash-in-the-pan stuff.

.
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Unread 06-15-2023, 01:43 PM
James Brancheau James Brancheau is offline
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"Regarding the harsh climate within which art
creation exists today, is it possible that "this, too, will pass" and the pendulum will swing? (Or will AI stamp out that, too?)"

You, in particular, give me confidence that it will. Even with the cheese graphs, it's obvious that you are sanity run amok.*

This is one instance where I feel like I'm the crazy person paranoid about the evil of pinball machines or something. AI is more threatening, more advanced than I anticipated at this point. It's not there yet, creativity is a sore thumb with it, for example. It can't really do it. But it's close. I suspect I've already graded papers generated by AI. I think, whatever happens with this, this moment in history will be looked upon as pivotal.

*The run amok part was intended to be a compliment. I'm pretty sure that came across, but wanted to be sure.. Which is why I don't teach college in the states. I'd be fired immediately for multiple things in one sentence. Concision is important.

Last edited by James Brancheau; 06-15-2023 at 03:12 PM.
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Unread 06-15-2023, 04:07 PM
Jim Moonan Jim Moonan is offline
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Originally Posted by James Brancheau View Post
"
*The run amok part was intended to be a compliment. I'm pretty sure that came across, but wanted to be sure.. Which is why I don't teach college in the states. I'd be fired immediately for multiple things in one sentence. Concision is important.

Ha! You caught me in mid-response to query you about what exactly it is about me that has run amok! So I'm relieved...

I'm not fully informed of Hannah Gadsby's comedic art, but I don't care much for what I've seen. What I am impressed with is critic Jason Farago's take-down of the exhibit at the knees. I don't think she's done the Brooklyn Museum any favors, as Julie predicts. It's hard to imagine the curator waking up to this review and feeling rosy about the exhibit's success. We'll see... I still think these kinds of glib, cancel-culture-stained attacks will amount to next to nothing in terms of diminishing the power of Picasso's work.That's what I meant by flash-in-the-pan. It's more of a nuisance than anything noteworthy being added to the collective critique of Picasso's body of work.

Alas, AI shall never pass. With regard to "this, too, shall pass" What I do hope passes is the knee-jerk cancel culture that uses their arse for a hat. I hope it gives way to a transcendent generation of thinkers (my children's children!) that rejuvenates western culture to anchor itself to morals and values and science and art and literature while still reaching for freedoms. Coffee talk.

I'm with you. It's the work, the work, the work.

Or are we caught in a rat's wheel?
.

Last edited by Jim Moonan; 06-16-2023 at 10:42 AM.
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