Blogger Book Club II: I don't know if she's beautiful, but she's HOT

By Marc Geelhoed

I was struck by the radically American democratic call to arms (I almost wrote cri de coeur) that runs through each of Hickey's five essays. He writes, "Art is either a democratic political instrument, or it is not," on page 15, about the response of Senator Jesse Helms to Robert Mapplethorpe's photographs, and goes on to write later about the value of an essentially intuited notion of "beauty" that should govern our choices about what is valuable in art as well as what the market deems valuable. He starts out by writing about the chilly reception he and his book received the first time they were published (the book, at least; Hickey'd been around for years) in 1993, with lecture halls filled with hissing students and faculty who marched out en masse. Anyone who cares not what the public thinks so long as they're read is an elitist, at best, and that doesn't explain Hickey at all.

Hickey's aim is, as others in the book group have already said, to reinstate the notion of beauty as an artistic criterion on the level of all the others we cherish, and somewhat removing the intellectual appeal of art for something that's more immediately gratifying. It's the immediate gratification that leads us to pay attention in the first place, and which lead to its ultimate staying power. "Beauty is precedent," he writes, with his own italics. "Beautiful works survive sans virtue. Virtuous works sans beauty do not. In a democratic society, we express our discomfort with Beauty's off-site rationale by dispensing with it. But we keep the beauty." So, we excise the reason(s) we think something beautiful, but keep the beautiful object.

I'd argue that the rationale was never even really dispensed with, since it was never arrived at or wrestled with in the first place. I think--and how to prove this I have no idea--that most people when confronted with a painting, a novel, a symphony, or The Sopranos, make a gut judgment about whether it excites them and they find it worth revisiting, or they leave it by the wayside. The why, the how, the mysteries of its creation, these aren't exactly their focus. They want to be entertained, not to be treated as fools, and if the work on display achieves that, hey, great. If it doesn't, sayonara.

Which leads me to wonder about his castigation of institutions and the "bureaucrats" who staff them, and their neutral, "therapeutic," education-oriented attitudes. I say this not just because I am one of those bureaucrats who's all-too-aware of their goals and the compromises that go into achieving them, but that I'm honestly a little puzzled by why the institutions are worth going after with tooth and nail. I mean, someone's got to put this stuff on display, and that takes a great deal of planning and preparation and deal-making and negotiation, and compromise and a fair amount of artistic knowledge and a willingness to play nice and a willingness to give someone the what-for, and those seem like small prices to pay for the chance to go to the Met Museum and look at altarpieces, or go to Orchestra Hall, ahem, and hear the Chicago Symphony. I'll grant in an instant that there are excesses and excessive timidity in certain cases, but those aren't deal breakers.

A lengthy quotation:

"The experience of art within the therapeutic institution, by contrast, is presumed to be an end in itself. Under its auspices, we play a minor role in the master's narrative--the artist's tale--and celebrate his autonomous acts even as we are offhandedly victimized by the work's philosophical power and ruthless authority. [...] Whatever we get, we deserve--and what we get most prominently is ignored, disenfranchised, and instructed. Then we are told that it is 'good' for us."

("Victimized"? Chicago's Museum of Contemporary Art sells a t-shirt that says "FEAR NO ART," but I don't think Hickey's assaulting art is what they had in mind.)

Again, this is super democratic and basically a call for self-education, and while I think that autodidacts make fascinating people and would make an outstanding cadre of curators, I'm not yet ready to pronounce them the final arbiters. If nothing else, who's going to do the fund-raising? And is it really so bad to have to look at a painting on a wall in a museum? Is coming across it as you backpack through Florence so superior?

June 24, 2009 10:37 PM | | Comments (2)

Categories:

2 Comments

I think there is some point to Hickey's institution-bashing, but I think he vastly underestimates the ability of both artwork and viewer to transcend the setting. I find it hard to imagine that even the most mind-numbingly anesthetizing institutional setting could cut the viewer off from Mappelthorpe's subversive complicity.

Another thought: wouldn't the market privilege private ownership of art? Even if one grants that institutions enervate artistic impact (again, my actual experience of institutionally-curated art would seem to overcome this easily), isn't the alternative limiting the experience of art to a much smaller economic elite? The mechanisms that make it advantageous for the rich to share their artistic acquisitions with the public are also an institution.

Hickey never really proposes any viable "democratic" alternatives to the institutions. Private residences and a cocaine dealer's coffee table would limit the impact (particularly the public, political impact that Hickey longs for) that any piece of art, no matter how beautiful, would have. As someone who grew up in a home with no art and no money for it, I always got great pleasure--the first step approaching Hickey's beauty--from art wherever I could see it, which includes institutions.

Of course, I can see how curatorial decisions based on political consensus can yield mediocrity or micro-managed institutions can spiral into a singular artistic vision that loses its wider cultural relevance (I did work at both the Louvre and IRCAM-Centre Pompidou after all). Nevertheless, equating MOMA founder Alfred H. Barr Jr. to Goebbels and Stalin seems a little extreme. (p. 62).

Leave a comment

Blogger Book Club II

Coming June 22-26: The bloggers start in on this summer's non-required reading list and discuss The Invisible Dragon: Essays on Beauty, Revised and Expanded by Dave Hickey

- Blogger Book Club II: Painfully Normal and Incredibly Sincere
- Blogger Book Club II: Something I Liked
- Blogger Book Club II: I don't know if she's beautiful, but she's HOT
- Blogger Book Club II: Two-Lane Flattop
- Blogger Book Club II: Does a Dragon Eat Its Tail?

more entries

Blogger Book Club

March 16-20: Bloggers discuss Lawrence Lessig's Remix: Making Art and Commerce Thrive in the Hybrid Economy Participants: Marc Geelhoed Steve Smith Alex Shapiro Matthew Guerrieri Marc Weidenbaum Corey Dargel Brian Sacawa Lisa Hirsch

- Blogger Book Club: We Love Amateurs
- Blogger Book Club: Bangers and Mash-ups
- Blogger Book Club: Taking What They're Giving, 'Cause I'm Working For a Living
- Blogger Book Club: The Art of Imitation
- Blogger Book Club: Dust In the Wind

more entries

Me Elsewhere

Blogroll

About this Entry

This page contains a single entry by Mind the Gap published on June 24, 2009 10:37 PM.

Blogger Book Club II: Two-Lane Flattop was the previous entry in this blog.

Blogger Book Club II: Something I Liked is the next entry in this blog.

Find recent content on the main index or look in the archives to find all content.

AJ Ads

Introducing
AJ Arts Blog Ads

Now you can reach the most discerning arts blog readers on the internet. Target individual blogs or topics in the ArtsJournal ad network.

Advertise Here

AJ Blogs

AJBlogCentral | rss

culture
About Last Night
Terry Teachout on the arts in New York City
Artful Manager
Andrew Taylor on the business of arts & culture
blog riley
rock culture approximately
critical difference
Laura Collins-Hughes on arts, culture and coverage
Dewey21C
Richard Kessler on arts education
diacritical
Douglas McLennan's blog
Dog Days
Dalouge Smith advocates for the Arts
Flyover
Art from the American Outback
Life's a Pitch
For immediate release: the arts are marketable
Mind the Gap
No genre is the new genre
Performance Monkey
David Jays on theatre and dance
Plain English
Paul Levy measures the Angles
Real Clear Arts
Judith H. Dobrzynski on Culture
Rockwell Matters
John Rockwell on the arts
Straight Up |
Jan Herman - arts, media & culture with 'tude

dance
Foot in Mouth
Apollinaire Scherr talks about dance
Seeing Things
Tobi Tobias on dance et al...

jazz
Jazz Beyond Jazz
Howard Mandel's freelance Urban Improvisation
ListenGood
Focus on New Orleans. Jazz and Other Sounds
Rifftides
Doug Ramsey on Jazz and other matters...

media
Out There
Jeff Weinstein's Cultural Mixology
Serious Popcorn
Martha Bayles on Film...

classical music
Creative Destruction
Fresh ideas on building arts communities
The Future of Classical Music?
Greg Sandow performs a book-in-progress
On the Record
Exploring Orchestras w/ Henry Fogel
Overflow
Harvey Sachs on music, and various digressions
PianoMorphosis
Bruce Brubaker on all things Piano
PostClassic
Kyle Gann on music after the fact
Sandow
Greg Sandow on the future of Classical Music
Slipped Disc
Norman Lebrecht on Shifting Sound Worlds

publishing
book/daddy
Jerome Weeks on Books
Quick Study
Scott McLemee on books, ideas & trash-culture ephemera

theatre
Drama Queen
Wendy Rosenfield: covering drama, onstage and off
lies like truth
Chloe Veltman on how culture will save the world

visual
Aesthetic Grounds
Public Art, Public Space
Another Bouncing Ball
Regina Hackett takes her Art To Go
Artopia
John Perreault's art diary
CultureGrrl
Lee Rosenbaum's Cultural Commentary
Modern Art Notes
Tyler Green's modern & contemporary art blog
Creative Commons License
This weblog is licensed under a Creative Commons License.