'Monkey Business' curated by David Platzker at Susan Inglett Gallery
The First Art Newspaper on the Net    Established in 1996 Saturday, November 2, 2024


'Monkey Business' curated by David Platzker at Susan Inglett Gallery
United Press Photo. This Monkey Shines at Art, Too, 1957. Silver gelatin print, 7 x 9 in. Edition unknown, unsigned and unnumbered. (MKB0012). Courtesy of Specific Object / David Platzker and Susan Inglett Gallery, NYC.



NEW YORK, NY.- Susan Inglett Gallery and Specific Object are currently presenting “Monkey Business,” an exhibition curated by David Platzker examining the missing link between chimpanzees, Action Painting, and artwork generated by artificial intelligence platforms. For the last 35 years I’ve been deeply invested in conceptual art, the artists that have been pigeonholed into the genre and the vocabulary required to support the framework of the critical discourse surrounding it.

I’ve used words such as dematerialization, formulations, schemas, systems, systemizing and many other terms that express ordering processes far too many times for a single individual.That sentence alone sets the tone for a particular discourse that frequently occupies my mind. Words that form the base ingredients later distilled into a purified mode of artmaking that arose in the mid-1960s. There is no need to bore you further with more details. You could simply say, “it’s history.”

The truth is “conceptual art” was a phrase most “conceptualists” not only wished to distance themselves from—granted the term was one a critic coined to bind together disparate works being made by a relatively small number of international artists—while the artists themselves were mostly annoyed by being unfairly branded by a term as “dry as toast” in the eyes of many critics, curators, and collectors.

Over time I began to question my personal involvement in the work surrounding conceptual art. A large part of the questioning was driven by working on an exhibition that had become all- consuming and had brought me to a point where I felt not just my enthusiasm for conceptual art had been desiccated, but I was questioning how narrow my interest in art in general had become due to my investment in the “movement.”

In 2015, during one of my nearly daily strolls through the 5th floor galleries of The Museum of Modern Art, seeking a palate cleanser via a return to less cerebral art, I paused for an extended length of time in front of Jackson Pollock’s One: Number 31, 1950 (1950) and contemplated, as the painting affords one much to contemplate.
Primarily I was swept up in considering the evidence of the work’s own making—the dribbled, dripped, flung, and poured paint whose placement was driven by nothing more than a chance operation steered by Pollock as he guided the viscous medium with brushes, sticks, trowels and paint cans in congress with gravity towards the canvas spread out on the floor.

Of course, we can picture Pollock painting as there are well known photographs of the artist at work that were published in the August 8, 1949 issue of Life Magazine. The supporting article also relays the oft quoted statement, “When I am in my painting, I’m not aware of what I’m doing,” a statement that would never issue from the lips of a conceptual artist.

The phrase “action painting” is one of those rare terms in art that actively describes not only a genre, but the act of a work’s creation. To underline the history of the term, long before Pollock was making heroically scaled “action paintings” the phrase was used to describe paintings documenting the heroics of military men. A formidable example being the 1899 action painting by Rufus Fairchild Zogbaum, "Commodore George Dewey directing the battle from on board USS Olympia," depicting Dewey standing in a power pose astride a platform above the forward turret of the cruiser USS Olympia as he marshaled American naval forces against the Spanish at Manila Bay in 1898.

And, while “action painting” is frequently mashed up with the term “abstraction,” doing so is confusing as an “action painting” is not a “abstraction” of a reality. Simply put, it is just what it is, the residue of the actions of the work’s making.
Standing before the Pollock, it was clear to me that coming to terms with One: Number 31, 1950 required a suspension of disbelief. Without some foreknowledge it is hard to appreciate this painting as an artwork.

Visitors to MoMA, simply by walking through the museum’s doors, buy into the assumption that not only what hangs on the institution’s walls is art but by the virtue of it being placed on view at MoMA it must be important art. As one chief curator would frequently say, ”A+++ art,” which One: Number 31, 1950 certainly is.
Perhaps they, the museum’s visitors, know a bit about Pollock—Jack the Dribbler—who was celebrated not just by the art critics of his time, but in the popular press. That kernel of knowledge sets up the narrative that the artist had formal training and over successive years he pushed against boundaries as he advanced his work along, incrementally, towards his signature style scrawl of strewn house paints. One: Number 31, 1950 is a singular work that launched a flotilla of clichés such as “my kid could do that,” which—like any good cliché—is true to a certain degree.

Still this thinking drew me back to conceptualism. As hard as Pollock’s “non-objective” art was pushing against representation he was still producing art within a system. His works are formulations, schemas, built upon a scaffolding of art history that connects his practice to that of artists who came before. That is to say—in paraphrasing Sol LeWitt’s “Sentences on Conceptual Art”—Pollock was a mystic rather than a rationalist. His rational judgments repeated rational judgments, and his illogical judgements led to new experiences and conclusions that logic could not reach.
I’m sure I’m not the only person that has stood before One: Number 31, 1950 and pondered the infinite monkey theorem, the “theory” that given an infinite amount of time a monkey bashing typewriter keys at random would produce the complete works of William Shakespeare. Perhaps, at the very least, a sonnet or two.

With this thought in my head, still dulled albeit from my deep thoughts about conceptual art, I began to acquire vintage press black-and-white photographs of Christine, Congo, Freida, Homer, J. Fred Muggs, Sally, The Duke of Wellington, Zippy and many other chimpanzees trying their hand at action painting.

These images, reaching back to the 1930s, represent the modern challenges defining anti- illusion, action based, art.

While Pollock made conscious decisions—with regards to materials, scale, and completion— chimpanzees lack such agency. They are provided with paints, charcoal, crayons, or other pigmented media and a fixed sized sheet or canvas to work on. Perhaps a brush or other implement is offered and utilized though fingers are often the preferred tool.

What separates man from ape? In the case of action painting, it’s the capacity to make choices. Choices about materiality, scale, the reflexive nature of gestures that accentuate individual marks. Most importantly, the capacity to step away from the action of creation and recognize that a work is finished.

Over the years, as I added to my collection of these photographs, I continued to ponder how to best put them to use as a conversation starter, one specifically directed towards concerns of authorship and connoisseurship. I question why we elevate one action painter, or one painting over another when the appreciation of these artists and works is overwhelmingly subjective. How given works under the rubric of action painting are valued—by all definitions of the word— beyond that of formally similar paintings.

In the last year the rise of works produced by Artificial Intelligence platforms such as DALL-E, GPT, Stable Diffusion and other text-to-image products drew my attention for the same reasons I began to think about the distance between Pollock and primates. Critically the tether between precognition of mission involved in making a work of art and the recognition that the work is part of a continuum of historic art making that presumably only a human enjoys.

AI, like chimps, is simply afforded tools in service to an end. In this case, the completion of the work is preprogrammed to end in a given number of CPU cycles, as opposed to an artist who steps away from a canvas to "get acquainted" with it, as Pollock would say, and decide whether the work is indeed finished.

“Monkey Business” will frame the discussion through a timeline of documentation of Jackson Pollock as championed by Life Magazine and the popular press of his era, chimpanzees at the easel, and action paintings generated by AI.

“Monkey Business” will offer a fresh opportunity to have a dialogue about the new ghosts in the machine.

-David Platzker

Susan Inglett Gallery and Specific Object
'Monkey Business'
June 15th, 2023 - July 28th, 2023










Today's News

July 14, 2023

Vandal burns major public artwork by one of Italy's top living artists

Almine Rech now represents Choi Myoung Young

First-ever compilation of Eva Hesse's drawings published by Hauser & Wirth Institute

'Two Views of Abstract Expressionism: Seymour Boardman (1921-2005) and Ernest Briggs (1923-1984)' at Anita Shapolsky

Exhibition explores how the prince of artists became the artist of princes

Dual opening at PM/AM featuring Nicolas Coleman and Xiao Wang

New commission: Rebecca Louise Law creates hanging garden in centre:mk for IF: Milton Keynes International Festival

The Shed hires its new CEO from Boston Ballet

Milan Kundera, Czech literary star and Communist Party outcast, dies at 94

RIBA announces shortlist for 2023 Stephen Lawrence Prize: An inspiring snapshot of early career talent in architecture

Rare Albert Einstein signed scientific manuscript fetches $43,750 at auction

'Lucie Rie: The Adventure of Pottery' opening today at the Holbourne Museum

In The Heart of Another Country: The Diasporic Imagination Rises explores the concept of home

Sydney Contemporary announces ambitious Installation Contemporary program, the inaugural MA Art Prize and more

'Interior Resonances: 10th Anniversary Exhibition' now on view at Fridman Gallery

Frye's seventieth anniversary, bringing together eight artworks acquired in 2022, 'A Living Legacy'

'Monkey Business' curated by David Platzker at Susan Inglett Gallery

Salman Toor solo exhibition at Honolulu Museum of Art marks artist's debut in Pacific region

Summer 2023 International Artists in Residence unveil new artwork at Artpace San Antonio

A love of the worn

A revival of 'The Who's Tommy' seeks a new generation of followers

Review: Delayed by the pandemic, Pilobolus celebrates its 50th

Gost publishes 'The Uncanny' by Léonard Pongo

Free Books? Here's the Best Place to Get Them!

Yoga Teacher Training in Rishikesh shiv holistic yoga school

Yoga Teacher Training in Rishikesh shiva yoga ashram

Yoga School in Rishikesh vinyasa yoga academy

Yoga teacher training in India world peace yoga school

10 Warning Signs You Need to Hire a Car Accident Lawyer Immediately

The Importance of Hiring a Personal Injury Lawyer after an Accident

Elevate Your Bedroom with The Bedding Authority: Creating a Serene Sleep Oasis.

Treat ED: Buy Canadian Generic Cialis Online

Miki Agrawal is Educating the Public About Her TUSHY Bidet via Art Exhibit

5 Reasons Behind The Popularity Of Kratom Gold Shot Among Artists

Developments of Online Gambling




Museums, Exhibits, Artists, Milestones, Digital Art, Architecture, Photography,
Photographers, Special Photos, Special Reports, Featured Stories, Auctions, Art Fairs,
Anecdotes, Art Quiz, Education, Mythology, 3D Images, Last Week, .

 



Founder:
Ignacio Villarreal
(1941 - 2019)
Editor & Publisher: Jose Villarreal
Art Director: Juan José Sepúlveda Ramírez
Writer: Ofelia Zurbia Betancourt

Attorneys
Truck Accident Attorneys
Accident Attorneys
Holistic Dentist
Abogado de accidentes
สล็อต
สล็อตเว็บตรง

Royalville Communications, Inc
produces:

ignaciovillarreal.org juncodelavega.com facundocabral-elfinal.org
Founder's Site. Hommage
to a Mexican poet.
Hommage
       

The First Art Newspaper on the Net. The Best Versions Of Ave Maria Song Junco de la Vega Site Ignacio Villarreal Site Parroquia Natividad del Señor
Tell a Friend
Dear User, please complete the form below in order to recommend the Artdaily newsletter to someone you know.
Please complete all fields marked *.
Sending Mail
Sending Successful