Shock for shock's sake?The mayor is still angry. The museum's lifeline is threatened.
Now it's finally time to see what the "Sensation" is all about By Steven Henry Madoff
October 4, 1999
Web posted at: 12:29 p.m. EDT (1629 GMT)
In its own way, "Sensation," the Brooklyn Museum of Art's
sprawling show of young British artists that has opened up the
latest front in the culture wars, is a sheep in wolf's clothing.
That was bound to be. Not even an ad man's dream of a drop-dead
one-liner can hold its shock past the listener's double take.
And "Sensation" is precisely that: a vanity showcase from the
collection of British ad mogul Charles Saatchi--loud and
"naughty" works juxtaposed with the occasional better one--that
has generated more noise than it deserves.
Outraged by one work in the exhibition, Chris Ofili's black
madonna festooned with elephant dung, Rudolph Giuliani, New York
City mayor and all-but-declared U.S. Senate candidate, refused to
pay the October installment of the city's $7 million subsidy to
the museum. The city further claimed that the institution, in
league with Christie's auction house, a sponsor of the show and
the seller of $2.6 million of Saatchi's art last year, was
knowingly trying to raise the value of Saatchi's collection. It
then filed suit to throw the museum--one of the finest in the
country--out of the gracious city-owned building that has been its
home for more than 100 years. Supporters rallied to each side,
and both the New York Civil Liberties Union and the Catholic
League organized pickets.
The furor made its way to Washington as well, where the Senate
passed a nonbinding resolution sponsored by New Hampshire Senator
Robert Smith that called for an end to federal funding for the
museum. Trying not to alienate either camp, Hillary Clinton,
Giuliani's likely opponent for New York's Senate seat, chided the
mayor for threatening to shut down the museum but added, "There
are parts of this exhibit that would be deeply offensive. I would
not go to see this exhibit."
One of the more remarkable aspects of this whole affair is that
"Sensation" has gained more attention than any marketing campaign
for it could possibly have achieved. The furious outcry came
before practically anyone had actually viewed the art. If
Giuliani and Mrs. Clinton had bothered to go, they would have
seen an exhibition that trades shock for shallowness with all the
easy insouciance of youth. It has long been a vogue of
contemporary art to focus on social issues at the expense of
classical ideals of beauty, and the art here follows that vogue
with a vengeance. That's not to say that the work doesn't have
jolts of visual energy, corrosive or not. It is an energy that
was new to the somnolent British art scene and brought these
artists local and then international attention throughout the
'90s.
But the plain and sometimes ugly truth is that when this sort of
work sticks its jaw out into the wider world, its jaw turns to
glass. That is surely the case with the lightning rod of the
show, Ofili's The Holy Virgin Mary (1996). The work, which has
now been placed behind Plexiglas, with a velvet rope in front and
a guard standing by to protect it from any angry viewers, is a
perfectly competent rendering of a Christian icon--a central
figure on a ground of gold. The drawing of an African Mary (Ofili
is of Nigerian descent) is plausible, but there is no real depth,
no great feeling in the line. You might pass right by were it not
for Ofili's strategy to shove the voltage up by adorning it with
a pattern of cutouts from porn mags of women's crotches and then
adding to the rhythm of the work with clumps of elephant dung.
Interpretations reach too glibly for the symbolism of this Virgin
in a cloud of sex parts as an emblem of the sacred's overcoming
the profane, of the elephant manure as an African symbol of
regeneration that adds luster to the Madonna's beneficence. And
so it may be, but the painting is surely a calculated come-on.
In work after work in "Sensation," and there are some 92 pieces
by 42 artists spread out over nearly 22,000 sq. ft. of gallery
space, you see the same calculation peeking its tongue-wagging
little head out of the art. Much of what's on show here really
ought to be viewed the way another work about another Mary
was--last year's bathroom-humor blockbuster, Something About Mary.
It's lewd and long on visual pratfalls, and there is not a great
deal else to do but roll your eyes as you pass Sarah Lucas' Au
Naturel (1994), a dingy mattress leaning against a wall with an
erect cucumber shooting up with two oranges at its base, two ripe
melons across the way...you get the idea.
Throughout the show, there's an obsession with the body, leering
humor about sex and yammering about death. Tracey Emin's canvas
tent called Everyone I Have Ever Slept With (1995) is done inside
with crudely laid-out names and notes about old paramours. It
camps out a short distance from Mona Hatoum's more elegant but
hardly deep creation (despite its title, Deep Throat): a dining
table with proper tablecloth and silver, and a plate whose bottom
is a video screen showing the travels of an invasive camera down
a human gullet.
And then there are the enormously silly, explicitly sexual
sculptural romps by Jake and Dinos Chapman, whose fascination
with genetic mutation leads them down the very foolish path of
constructing girlish mannequins with phalluses for noses and
sexual orifices in all the wrong places. Hardly Rodin. But then
Rodin's Balzac, created just before the turn of the century,
wrapped the great French novelist in a cape beneath which, it was
said, he was holding his own member in the potent coupling of
climax and creative genius. The work outraged its patrons and
wasn't cast in bronze until after Rodin's death. Now it is
considered a masterpiece that foretells the abstract sculpture
that became a hallmark of this century's art.
That's not to say that the Chapmans' puerile offerings will rise
to a place of lasting esteem. No, the point is that work once
seen as scandalous takes on new meaning as culture is rocked by
alien, disquieting expressions and then slowly evolves. And there
are works in this show that warrant respect and have had it from
critics and gallerygoers for some time.
Rachel Whiteread, for example, is a leading figure among
contemporary sculptors. Her plaster and resin casts of the space
around domestic objects, whether it be the airy volume of a room
or the underside of a humble chair, are eerie, elegant and
refined. The exhibition includes a gorgeous gallery of these
chair pieces: variously colored blocks shining softly under a
skylight like a plot of grave markers. It's a tranquil hymn to
loss and absence, evoking the sense of departed souls who once
sat among us. Its thoughtfulness is a respite from so much brazen
shouting, and like a good deal of her art, it can be enjoyed as
much for the minimalist pleasure of its simple, rhythmic shapes
as for the stories it conjures.
There is also ample work to look at by Damien Hirst, the most
prominent and furiously productive artist of his generation on
the London scene. Hirst has been vilified by animal-rights groups
for his sculptures incorporating dead animals, sliced down their
middle or sideways and displayed in all their forensic grimness
inside formaldehyde-filled cases. The alarming piece that first
brought him fame is here as well: A Thousand Years (1990), with
its vitrine full of maggots and flies that swarm over the bloody
head of a cow. It's a little pocket of hell: nauseating,
unerringly brutal, but its shock looks death terribly in the
face. Not silly, not shallow, not shock for shock's sake. Nor is
Marc Quinn's Self (1991), in which a cast replica of the artist's
head is filled with eight pints of his own blood, kept cool in a
refrigerated case. We'd all like to freeze our mortality, stop it
cold, and you can take Quinn's literal rendering of the idea or
you can leave it. Yet the bust itself has all the solid weight of
bronze, and this classical death mask in its futuristic case is
odd and chilling indeed.
In another gallery sits Marcus Harvey's huge grisaille portrait
of an English child abuser and murderer, Myra Hindley, whose
image is composed of child-size handprints. Proving that local
politics tends to make all art local, it is this work, rather
than Ofili's Holy Virgin, that prompted an outcry in London,
where "Sensation" first appeared two years ago at the Royal
Academy of Arts. And yet, like Ofili's work, Myra is hardly an
astonishment, looking like a wobbly send-up of a picture by the
American painter Chuck Close. People in New York, ignorant of her
crimes, will surely pass it by.
Amid the outrage and grandstanding in the exhibition, some
crucial issues swiftly show themselves: Should the largesse of
public funding be allowed to circumscribe free speech? Can
unhindered expression, in its turn, become sheer offense? And how
ironclad are the constitutional protections for edgy art that may
amount to hate speech? In the end, art can be political, but it
cannot affect the world the way politicians can. Says Bill Ivey,
chairman of the National Endowment for the Arts: "The damage can
outlast the politics of the moment."
In the Brooklyn Museum, right outside the entrance to
"Sensation," is a small oil by Thomas Cole, the great 19th
century painter who went to America from England as a young man
and laid down on canvas the raw grandeur of the landscape as
illustration of the new nation's moral power. The picture is easy
to miss, a little study of a Christian pilgrim on the verdant
knoll of a mountaintop. His arms are outspread, brilliant under a
sky ablaze with light and hope.
Close down the museum for a single painting? This is another one
to look at. Visitors to "Sensation" might want to start their
viewing by stopping first in front of Cole's bright image. And
coming back to it at the end.
--With reporting by Ann
Blackman/Washington and William Dowell/New York
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Cover Date: October 11, 1999
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