Thursday, May 31, 2012

Conventions and Art: Mistakes, Mysteries and Misnomers. Part II.




In Part I of this essay I demonstrated a distinction between customs and conventions.  I argued that conventions presuppose the applications of language.  A convention is a description; it is how we describe the world.  In effect all conventions are language conventions.  Indeed to describe something as art is invoking a convention whereas a custom in the sense we are discussing it is a habitual, commonly followed or traditional practice.   While conventions may be customary and customs may invoke or entail a convention they are distinctly different activities.  This is important because artists commonly invoke totally new conventions, requiring new descriptions of their work as a means of promoting understanding.  For example consider the painting below.


This work is by the well-known artist Sydney Nolan and its subject matter will be easily recognized by Australian viewers and those familiar with Australian history or art.  It is a picture of our most famous bushranger/outlaw Ned Kelly but we need to apply a convention to understand it and because Australians are so familiar with the character it depicts they do it automatically.  Here we see a two dimensional caricature of a horse and a ‘thing’ connected to a broom with a landscape in the background.   The ‘thing’ looks like a pot on the horse’s back with a piston sticking up out of it only the piston has a see-through slot with two ball bearing-like things in it.  All are two dimensional in what is called a naïve style.  I’m sure you will recognize this is not the correct description but how do we describe this painting?  Its title is Ned, does that help?  I think not for sometimes titles of paintings are merely labels. Well here are two more pictures for those of you who are not familiar with Ned Kelly.

                              
                                                                                     
                                                     

The picture on the left shows us the home made body armour that Ned Kelly was wearing when he was captured.  The etching on the right depicts the bushranger in action wearing his armour under his coat.  Now we can understand how the artist arrived at his caricature.  What I described as a pot we can now describe as body armour, the piston is head gear and the ball-bearings are eyes peering through the slot in the head gear and the broom is a rifle.  As my earlier description was a convention so is my latter description for conventions are arbitrary descriptions.  Nevertheless the latter description is the one that provides us with an understanding of what is taking place in Nolan’s screen-print.  Nolan’s painting is something of visual metaphor for the Ned Kelly legend.  As I noted in part I of this essay conventions provide us with a context that allows us to adjust our thinking about how a new aspect of our art-reality is to be understood.  The quality of a work of art is a direct result of how we are obliged to describe it; the conventions we must use.   Nolan has chosen a naive style reminiscent of Rousseau’s primitive manner but highly original in his attempt to capture the scape of the Australian bush and its most famous outlaw. 

Now let us consider a different art form that presents us with a visual perspective.
                                     

What conventions must we use to describe this work by Barbra   Hepworth?   We don’t have to describe it at all if we wish but that would pre-empt our ability to discuss it or think about it.  We have before us three smooth stones or rocks perhaps made of marble and arranged in a specific fashion on a stone slab.  What are we expected to make of it?  I doubt we would be allowed to handle them and their position seems to be significant to our understanding.  In this instance the title of the work provides us with the convention we need to understand the artist’s work.  It is titled Three Forms and by describing each of these pieces as a form we can see the point of their juxtaposition and why they are smooth.  The artist has created a work of contrasts using the same material for each different piece which enhances the notion of forms.  The artist has offered us in three dimensions what we often see as two dimensional forms and we are reminded of this by the shadows of each form that fall onto the slab.  It is an exercise in demonstrating the forms within a work as opposed to the form of the work.  Again a convention opens the door to understanding.  Here is another work by an Australian Artist that I purchased without having any idea of the title.

                          

For me it captures the colours of the Australian bush and the denuded, charcoal encrusted trees left standing after a bush fire.  Completed entirely with a palette knife I recognized from the different shades and strange shapes different levels of the landscape and while I was curious about them I was impressed with the skill and talent of the artist.   That description is, of course, a convention.  I’m sure it may be described in a number of ways but when I learned that the title of the work was Gravel Pit all I could say was yes of course it is. The boarders of the pit are presented as dark green and we see different shades of earth as we look down into the pit, a style we can liken to post-impressionism.  Light is diffused, hazy as if the bushfire smoke lingered.  The painting is made up of delineated shapes of colour reminiscent of Cezanne’s Bibemus Quarry paintings.

Bibemus Quarry


Of course it is not always the case that understanding is forthcoming as a result of the artist’s chosen title.  Sometimes it is left to the viewer to come up with an appropriate convention in order to grasp the flavour of a work such as Jackson Pollock’s Number 28.

                        

This is what The Metropolitan Museum of Art offers as a description by way of a well-known art critic.

The dominant critic of the day, Clement Greenberg, called such works "polyphonic." "Knit together of a multiplicity of identical or similar elements," he wrote, this art "repeats itself without strong variation from one end of the canvas to the other, and dispenses, apparently, with beginning, middle, and ending."
The Metropolitan Museum of Art

Well I guess that’s one way to describe it.  Still another way is:

In Number 28, l950 there is such a careless grace, a feeling of inevitability, a weaving in and out of those thick and thin black lines over a deep galaxy of silver and blue space.

What gives us such a lift are those solid, well placed, low and thick obstructions. But they don't hold us down! There is a whirling, wild sense of freedom here, and at the same a most cunning arrangement of space as to line, thick as to thin, rise as to fall, abrupt angle and surprising dash. Here, impediment is a means of freedom, and the artist's beautiful, central ambition is satisfied, and we are satisfied. We feel we can be ambitious to be free like that. It is a sign, as Eli Siegel has described, of the world itself making beautiful sense, and we like it.  By Dorothy Koppelman

I suppose it is the signature of much modern and contemporary art that the viewer must invent their own descriptive handle by which to grasp such works.  While they can easily be appreciated for the technique applied, the medium used and the object or result of the artist’s determined conclusion this seems not to satisfy those who believe an aesthetic description is warranted.  Neither critic mentions the fact that the work is enamel on canvas or how the artist built the work carefully controlling his colours. Unfortunately aesthetic descriptions are always inferences (though they are often mistakenly described as interpretations) drawn to satisfy a need for understanding.  Unlike artistic descriptions they have little or no truth value nor is this necessary for they are personal conventions for private enjoyment.  Sometimes the ability to draw such inferences becomes an end in itself and the work of art is merely the catalyst.   At other times authorities seem unable to even recognize some works as art.

Artists are incessantly experimenting in an effort to create new forms and they tend to forge far ahead of the vocabulary that provides us with the means to see these works of art.  A classic example is Constantin Brancusi’s Bird In Space, a five foot bronze sculpture.     
                                               

U.S. customs impounded the piece when it was shipped to New York for an art show.  Though its elegance was obvious, customs insisted it was raw metal and imposed a tax on it.  Brancusi was forced to go to court to force U.S. Customs to release it on the grounds that it was a work of art.  U.S Customs officers were unable to apply a convention which would allow them to describe this work as art.  Having a title allows us to recognize the aerodynamic sense of flight but we may well have inferred such a description; the shape predates the Concord aircraft.

Sometimes merely having a convention to describe a new genre provides a position from which to value new methods of presentation.  Such was the case for works now recognized as belonging to the genre of Impressionism. 
                       
This work is Claude Monet’s Sunrise which is typical of the genre.  The Impressionists were trying to capture the play of light and shadow as it appeared to the artist’s eyes.  They were described as impressionists by a critic who was trying to depreciate such works but the description proved to be the key convention that allowed the public a means appreciating impressionism.

But it is not only new movements that require a convention in order to promote understanding.  Consider this work by Rembrandt.
                          
This work is described as Aristotle contemplating the bust of Homer.  Could we have guessed who it was that Rembrandt was showing us?  Was Aristotle ever dressed in such a fashion?  Why do you suppose Rembrandt was trying to show us Aristotle rather than a wealthy Dutch patron?   Aristotle is not dressed as a 4th century BC philosopher.  He is dressed in clothing contemporary with the period in which the artist painted; a common practice for Rembrandt.  He enjoyed painting such fashionable clothing for it allowed him to show off his technique with a loaded brush (called impasto) providing the work with a textual richness.

Some of you may remember those B grade war films where we saw German army officers at German Headquarters speaking perfect English (sometimes with an accent).  The convention was that we were to understand that they were speaking German in their homeland.  Rembrandt is invoking a similar convention by displaying Aristotle in contemporary Dutch dress.  We are to understand that it is the dress of a 4th century Greek aristocrat.
Launt Thompson
http://www.amazon.com/s/ref=nb_sb_noss?field-keywords=Launt+Thompson&url=search-alias%3Daps&x=16&y=9




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