Sunday, 12 March 2017

Gustav Metzger, 1926 - 2017

Gustav Metzger, applying hydrochloric acid to nylon sheets - Auto-Destructive Art event, South Bank, London, 1961
Gustav Metzger died 1 March 2017.
The social history of the UK in the 1970s is largely defined by industrial disputes - the postal workers' strike (1971), 2 miners' strikes (1972 and 1974), the Grunwick dispute (1976-77) and the public sector workers' strikes remembered as the 'Winter of Discontent' (1978-79). However, no-one much remembers the Art Strike of 1977- 80 called by Gustav Metzer in 1974. The aim was the destruction of capitalism, no less (or the 'art system', at least): 
The refusal to labour is the chief weapon of workers fighting the system; artists can use the same weapon. To bring down the art system it is necessary to call for years without art, a period of three years - 1977 to 1980 - when artists will not produce work, sell work, permit work to go on exhibitions, and refuse collaboration with any part of the publicity machinery of the art world… Three years is the minimum period required to cripple the system… In place of the practice of art, people can spend time on the numerous historical, aesthetic and social issues facing art. It will be necessary to construct more equitable forms for marketing, exhibiting and publicising art in the future. As the twentieth century has progressed, capitalism has smothered art - the deep surgery of the years without art will give it a new chance. (Read the full text here.)
In truth, Metzger was probably the only artist actually to withdraw his labour. While it is easy to scoff at the impracticality of such a gesture, Metzger's 'career' (or anti-career) stands as a model of sincere and idealistic commitment.
The following notes are compiled from the writings of John A. Walker - see refs. at foot of text.
Metzger was born into a Polish-Jewish family in Nuremberg in 1926 where he was witness to the Nazi rallies. According to Walker he was both impressed by the spectacle and was left with a life-long suspicion of media manipulation of the masses. Metzger was sent with his brother to England in 1939; other members of his family perished in the Holocaust.
Metzger’s interest in art developed through the 1940s and 50s; an early interest in action Painting (especially Jackson Pollock) evolved into a practice which combined action with destruction – ‘painting’ with acid onto nylon so that the ground progressively disintegrated.  (Watch a short film of an action in 1965 here.) He wrote a manifesto ‘Auto-Destructive Art’ in 1959.
Later work experimented with liquid crystals – heat sensitive liquid crystals were placed between glass slides inserted into a projector and rotated: as the crystals heated and cooled they changed colour to produce constantly evolving patterns. (See Tate catalogue.)
Metzger’s work was consistently engaged with politics and he cared deeply about the fate of the world - haunted by Nazism, the Holocaust and the Atom bomb he tried to alert us to the dangers of excessive capitalism and threats to the environment; he would present work only in public galleries and public spaces maintaining the ideal of making meaningful work that resisted commodification.
(For a fuller account of Metzger's story read John A. Walker's GustavMetzger, the Conscience of the Artworld.
Read appreciations by Adrian Searle and Hans Ulrich Obrist.
Watch a short video featuring Metzger talking about his work, made in 2015 for the Tate.
References.
Walker, John A. (2002) Left Shift: Radical Art in Britain in 1970s Britain, London: I.B. Tauris

Gustav Metzger, Painting on Cardboard, c,1961-2

Gustav Metzger, Recreation of 1961 Auto-Destructive art event. 14 October 2006. South Bank, London. (Brian Hodgson executing work.)

Gustav Metzger, Liquid Crystal Environment, 1965 remade 2005
Gustav Metzger, Liquid Crystal Environment, 1965 remade 2005

Gustav Metzger, Historic photographs: No. 1: Liquidation of the Warsaw Ghetto, April 19-28, 1943, 1995

Gustav Metzger, Historic photographs: Till we have built Jerusalem in

England’s green and pleasant land, 1998. (Twyford Down),

Gustav Metzger, Historic photographs: Terror and Oppression, 2007

Saturday, 11 March 2017

Jannis Kounellis, 1936 - 2017

Jannis Kounellis, Untitled, 1969
Jannis Kounellis died 16 February 2017.
Kounellis was a key figure in Arte Povera, a movement which flourished in the late 1960s through to the 1970s. Arte Povera was a term coined by Italian art critic Germano Celant; it means, literally, 'poor art' - 'poor' in the sense of using everyday, commonplace or 'raw' materials. In Kounellis' case this included, for example, wood, coal, sacking, steel, wool and fire. However, his most notorious works were, perhaps, those employing horses (Untitled - an installation of 12 horses first presented in Rome in 1969 and reprised on various occasions, most recently in New York in 2015) and live birds, such as the macaw perched in front of a grey, monochrome panel as part of Untitled, 1967.
However, more typically, Kounellis' installations featured steel shelving units, blocked doorways and windows and the juxtaposition of contrasting materials to effect a poetic transformation of the architectural space so that the viewer's perception of the materiality of the world is enriched.
Read an obituary by Christopher Masters.
Jannis Kounellis, Untitled, 1960
Jannis Kounellis, Untitled, 1967
Jannis Kounellis, Untitled, 1967 (detail)
Jannis Kounellis, Untitled, 1968
Jannis Kounellis, Untitled, 1969
Jannis Kounellis, Untitled, 1969
Jannis Kounellis, Untitled, 2014
Jannis Kounellis, Untitled,2014
Jannis Kounellis, gallery installation 2014
Jannis Kounellis, Dodecafonia, installation  in the deconsecrated church of Sant’Andrea de Scaphis, 2015

Friday, 10 March 2017

Howard Hodgkin, 1932 - 2017

Howard Hodgkin, Clean Sheets, 1982-84
Howard Hodgkin died on 9 March 2017.
Hodgkin was an idiosyncratic painter who claimed to "hate painting... It's always been agony"; he was an apparently abstract painter who insisted that he was actually "a figurative painter of emotional situations"
I have tended to fall in and out of love with Howard Hodgkin's (mostly) modestly-sized, richly-coloured, paintings on wood panels. It is 30 years since my first infatuation - inspired by his exhibition Forty Paintings at the Whitechapel in 1985. Occasionally, the sensuous richness of his colours has, like too much rich food, left me yearning for something more ascetic. However, at their best Hodgkin's paintings are thrilling and intoxicating hits of colour.
Absent Friends, an exhibition of portraits by Hodgkin will be at the National Portrait Gallery from 23 March - 18 June 2017.
Read a (very good) obituary by Michael McNay, and an appreciation by Mark Hudson; read five tributes. See more paintings on the artist's website.
(Click on images to enlarge.)
Howard Hodgkin, Bombay Sunset, 1972-73
Howard Hodgkin, The Moon, 1978-80
Howard Hodgkin, After Corot, 1979-82
Howard Hodgkin, Waking up in Naples, 1980-84
Howard Hodgkin, Patrick in Italy, 1992-93
Howard Hodgkin, Storm, 1996-97
Howard Hodgkin, Open the Door Richard, 1998-2000
Howard Hodgkin, In the Bedroom, 2004-05
Howard Hodgkin, Old Books, 2006
Howard Hodgkin, Morning, 2015-16

Sunday, 27 November 2016

Anselm Kiefer - White Cube, Bermondsey

Anselm Kiefer, Rorate Caeli Desuper, 2016
Anselm Kiefer: Walhalla is at White Cube, Bermondsey until 12 February 2017

Kiefer’s big themes – German history and mythology, creation and destruction – are fully present in this hugely ambitious show which summons both the Walhalla of Norse myth - the enormous hall to which the dead battle-heroes, chosen by Odin, were led by the Valkyries -  and the 19th century Walhalla, the marbled-monument to Germanic heroes created by King Ludwig I of Bavaria. However, in place of the gold of myth and the splendid polished marble of Ludwig’s neo-classical temple, Kiefer’s Walhalla is in the colours of concrete and lead.  
Kiefer has transformed the central corridor of White Cube’s huge Bermondsey gallery into a bleak, gloomy, dormitory of steel beds made up with lead sheets and pillows. In the galleries leading off the corridor are sculptures, vast paintings and installations – one, installation, Arsenal, replete with giant lead books fills an entire gallery; the paintings, made of oil, acrylic, emulsion, clay and lead are of ruined concrete towers in a scarred landscape under apocalyptic skies.
Astonishing – a Gesamkunstwerk.
Listen to Kiefer interviewed about the exhibition on Radio 4’s Front Row; read reviews by William Cook, Emily Spicer, Caroline Elbaor and Jonathan Jones.
Listen to Wagner’s Entry of the Gods into Walhalla from Das Rheingold.
See also blog entries on Kiefer's 2014 RA exhibition here and here.
Click on images to enlarge.
Anselm Kiefer, Walhalla, 1992-2016
Anselm Kiefer, Walhalla, 1992-2016 (detail)
Anselm Kiefer, Sursum corda, 2016
Anselm Kiefer, Sursum corda, 2016 (detail)
Anselm Kiefer, Arsenal, 1983-2016 (detail)
Anselm Kiefer, San Loreto, 2016
Anselm Kiefer, Walhalla, installation view
Anselm Kiefer, nubes pluant ustem, 2016
Anselm Kiefer, nubes pluant ustem, 2016 (detail)

Anselm Kiefer, Gehäutete Landschaft, 2016
Anselm Kiefer, Gehäutete Landschaft, 2016 (detail)
Anselm Kiefer, Walhalla, installation view
Anselm Kiefer, from Walhalla, 2016
Anselm Kiefer, Walhalla, 2016