• Pessimism – Cedar Lewishohn

    Date posted: June 18, 2006 Author: jolanta
    Pessimism
    Cedar Lewishohn
     
     
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    It’s December 15, 2003. Saddam Hussein has just been captured, caught
    hiding in a hole somewhere south of Tikrit. The world is watching and waiting
    in anticipation to see what happens next.
    Meanwhile, back in Glasgow I’m looking at the work of Polish painter
    Piotr Janas. Sloppy yet refined, his medium scale abstracts are primarily
    white, black and red (with the odd dab of sky blue or dark green). To call this
    stuff retro would be like saying Dolly Parton has a mildly pronounced chest. In
    truth there is nothing but retro. Imagine a Kiki Smith performance painted by Cy
    Twombly with some early 80’s arcade graphics thrown in for good measure and
    you’re just about there.

     

    So what makes this work new? Not the format, or the materials, and
    definitely not the aesthetic. In which case its left down to that old chestnut
    of  “context” to drag the work into
    the world of now. There are no rules in art, so artists aren’t obliged to
    reference the time in which they live. If we look at the best art from the past
    however, it all seems to reflect the time in which it was made. And this is
    perhaps what’s missing from Janis’s equation. Displayed alongside the paintings
    was a scattering of sculptural pieces by recent graduate Daniel Bell. The works
    had the look of a Franz West’s sculpture made by Brian Griffiths circa 1997.
    The use of a table for a plinth also brought Franz West to mind. Unfortunately
    the sculptures lacked the clumsy delicacy of Griffiths or the logic-defying
    zaneyness of West, and had no salient virtues of their own.

     

    By the time I’d descended into the depths of Transmission’s second
    gallery space my thoughts were again with tyrant Dictator Saddam Hussein. I
    imagined his dug out hide away was something like the basement I was now
    entering, maybe a bit smaller and minus the art of course. (Though it was
    rumoured Saddam had kept a Richard Prince screen print with him the whole time
    he was on the run.) The downstairs gallery housed a separate exhibition by Mick
    Peter, which featured a half-finished wall made of large grey bricks.
    “Untitled” (2003), was probably the best thing in both shows simply because it
    had the balls to be a total bit of shit. While the work upstairs was little
    more than pastiche, Peter’s star piece took a devil-may-care attitude, and
    succeeded on those terms. Devoid of colour, technical adeptitude or any sense
    of conventional beauty, the work at least inspired a fleeting sense of wonder.
    Peter’s nonchalant slackness was shot to bits with the addition of five
    shabbily displayed A4 prints (a couple of which showed promise) and a seriously
    wack over-scaled trompe oeil armchair frame. In the end, the main
    problem with the two shows at Transmission Gallery in December 2003 wasn’t just
    lack of ambition, humour or originality— because there’s loads of great art
    that doesn’t have any of those things. The main problem was the art just wasn’t
    very interesting to start with.

     

     

    style=’mso-char-type:symbol;mso-symbol-font-family:"Times New Roman Special G1"’>©
    lang=EN-GB style=’font-size:8.0pt;font-family:Verdana;color:black’> Cedar
    Lewisohn 2004

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