• The Ends of Art – Kirk Hughey

    Date posted: June 19, 2006 Author: jolanta

    The Ends of Art

    Kirk Hughey

     
     
     
    “Frankly,
    if you’re investing in art in order to make money, you’re a fool… from an
    investment point of view, you’d be better off putting your money in lottery
    tickets.” (an anonymous London art-dealer)

     

    Increasingly
    we can see the art-world as a purely commercial enterprise fueled by strategies
    similar to corporate merchandising. But the questions remain; why does it work
    and can it last? When a visit to Boone or Sonnabend offers little more
    experience than a walk through the local mall, why change clothes and suffer
    through theory? The only incentive for the rich and socially ambitious can be
    the dual prospect of arty cachet and speculative profit.

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    Koons
    and Murakami offer their versions of quotidian toys in various stages of
    inflation. A noted reviewer leads the cheers by applying the terms; “cosmic”,
    “mystery”, “halcyon” “redeeming”, and “mystical” to a show of Koons. Doesn’t
    leave much for Leonardo does it? Hirst and Barney present spectacles that are
    feeble versions of Hollywood or Las Vegas: from stage-show to Texas Chainsaw
    Massacre. Currin combines cartoon exaggeration and sentimental quotation;
    soft-porn comix meets Hallmark cards. By co-opting the forms and styles of
    popular “mass art”, without their context of its value as entertainment, the
    art of galleries and curators only proclaims its impotence – it cannot compete
    on the popular level and offers nothing of its own. Now the most rewarding art
    will be found by patient search far outside the borders of the art world. The
    art of Barney is insignificant compared to that of his roommate.

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    Implicitly,
    the art world also functions as a covert form of proto-fascism where the
    “popular” is exploited as a means of enriching a few through the collusion of
    commercial and state-supported interest. The comparatively innocent whimsy of
    the popular object is perverted into an elitist fetish. Pseudo-leftist costumes
    hide the “greed is good” of Wall Street. The strategy is successful because no
    quality of intelligence, imagination, sensitivity or experience is necessary,
    only a willingness to follow the dictates of self-anointed authority with the
    adoption of fashionable attitudes. Irony makes it all possible – not genuine
    irony but the false sophistication of irony as pose. Cynicism is the only
    affect allowed. This makes it possible to indulge any degree of sentimentality,
    crude sensation or puerile attachment as long as the required pose is
    maintained – the vacuous rich can feed their appetites and still be hip and
    trendy. Thus, one of three casts of “Michael Jackson and Bubbles” by Jeff Koons
    can sell for an amount equal to the lifetime incomes of 150 Afghan families
    instead of a few dollars at the local Walmart.

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    When
    Abstract Expressionism became established as a major movement in international
    art, its products became valuable on the same level as those of established
    European art. In short, worth the same kind of money. The success of Pollock in
    the market confirmed this and spread to include others in the group. For the
    first time it became possible for American artists (and their cadre of
    followers, including curators, critics and collectors) to become both famous
    and rich. Sometimes very rich. The art market itself at this point also became
    noted as an investment/speculative market, not unlike the stock or commodity
    exchanges, and money flowed into art on an unprecedented scale.

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    If a
    market becomes established the next problem becomes how to keep feeding it.
    This requires more product that somehow can be easily recognized and
    objectively identified (or branded). There must also be some sort of “planned
    obsolescence” so that new products can be introduced at entry level to fuel
    speculation without eliminating the value of the old – which themselves become
    stabilized as “blue-chip” investments. The speculative vehicles have to be
    recognizable in some way to a small group of “insiders”(so everyone doesn’t
    jump on the bandwagon immediately and drive the offering price too high). The
    criteria can’t be too esoteric or depend on subjective values – they have to be
    identifiable on some simple basis or, alternatively, dependent on identifiable
    “experts” who can determine value by their opinion. So much for finance 101.

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    Finally
    we get to art that is strictly “idea”. Any idea will do and, since
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    is irrelevant, this becomes a major breakthrough because anything
    made by anyone can become product to feed the money-machine. Professor Danto
    professes the “end” of art as a search for itself and claims that now “anything
    can be art”. Whatever the validity of his underlying theory (including some
    vague promise of “embodied meanings” – though anyone familiar with the human
    animal knows its propensity for arbitrarily assigning any meaning to anything),
    this is taken to be no more than acknowledgement of existing fact. It does
    serve though to justify fact by the credibility of philosophy – thus taking
    value distinctions out of the messy hands of artists and handing them over to
    experts like curators, writers, dealers – and philosophers.

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    Did
    this result in a condition of “pluralism” in art or to the obvious conclusion
    that if anything can be art, then everything, in potentia at least, is art and
    everyone an artist? Of course not, that would be self-defeating and would end
    with the elimination of the art market. It resulted in art that can only be
    distinguished by its “projected” meanings, which in turn can only be determined
    by selected interpreters on the basis of perceived changes in fashion. Art and
    money are now synonymous. In fact, the very term “art” is now dispensable save
    for some nostalgic connection, like an ancestor’s portrait in a vault.

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    Just
    for an example of the prevailing state of the art, we can look at the Turner
    Prize awarded annually in Britain. This prize serves as a distinguishing mark
    of collectible contemporary art. Simply making it onto the “short-list” is
    enough to consolidate an artist’s reputation declaring both the value of their
    work and its potential appreciation in price. There is an age limit for the
    nominees- one imagines that is because a younger artist is considered a better
    speculative investment offering more opportunities for multiplying profit. The
    jury is typically composed of five members. In all twenty years of the Turner
    Prize no artist has been on the jury. In all twenty years a member of the
    Patrons of New Art has been on the jury (thus in a position to help qualify
    investments they have made or intend to make). The director of Tate Modern,
    with undeniable influence in the museum world, has always been on the jury,
    along with annually selected representatives from other museums or art
    institutions (people lower on the museum pecking order so they might consider
    the benefits of following the lead of the Tate?) Occasionally there will be a
    representative from an art publication – one prominent enough to be dependent
    on dealer advertising and connections with museum personnel.

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    How
    long will these conditions prevail in the art world? Maybe a very long time. We
    might wonder what could bring an end or change. Perhaps a large body of
    investors will realize that the market can be controlled by a few very rich
    collectors (like the fabled market “corner” sought in other venues) and will
    leave for more democratic pastures. New investors with a more independent view
    of value might enter the market, driving down the prices of the old status quo.
    It could also just end when investors generally realize the market has no more
    foundation than that of the dot-coms before the bust or Enron before the
    whistle was blown. Unfortunately when the market does crash it will likely take
    everyone with it. In today’s world the value of money, like superstition,
    depends on gullibility. It can end the first time the charm fails.

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