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More on Pollock
I was visiting Portfolio.com this morning to look over Anthony Haden-Guest's piece on how the ongoing banking and credit market upheavals may effect patronage of the arts. Big banks and investment houses like UBS, Deutsche Bank and Lehman Brothers are major supporters of art fairs and exhibitions, and major collectors too. The upshot: a number of corporate art people telling Haden-Guest that everything will be fine, while the big losses suffered at their outfits make you wonder.
But what then caught my eye was this post from last week by Felix Salmon, who blogs for Portfolio.com about markets and who takes a frequent intelligent interest in art. (An example — see his post of a few weeks ago explaining what was wrong with the attempt by the economist David Galenson to identify the 100 greatest works of 20th century art by toting up how often they appeared as illustrations in art history textbooks.) But Salmon's post about the potential sale by the University of Iowa of Mural, an important Jackson Pollock, relies on a blind spot that I've seen a few times in discussions about that Pollock.
The pertinent paragraphs:
...some paintings belong not to "the people of Iowa" so much as to the people of the world, and belong in a world-class collection. Which, frankly, the University of Iowa Museum of Art isn't.
Remember that the idea was never to simply sell Mural off to the highest bidder; it was to sell it to another museum. And I'm pretty sure there's more than one major US institution which could rustle up a nine-figure sum pretty much overnight if the painting were to come on the market.
But the problem with selling the Pollock, as I pointed out a couple of days ago, is that it would represent a further worsening of the (so far limited) trend by colleges to look at their campus art collections as assets that can be stripped and sold off to pay for other needs. If that practice ever becomes legitimized, no campus collection is safe. That is the main thing at issue in the fight to prevent the Pollock from being sold. (Which, as I also pointed out the other day, looks unlikely now.) And it trumps any and all other benefits that a sale might bring.
I also don't agree with Salmon's claim that a painting as important as Mural doesn't belong in a place as remote from the great urban art centers as Iowa. The logic of that argument leads inevitably to the idea that all great paintings belong in just a dozen or so major cities. In which case, why bother building that Guggenheim in out of the way Bilbao? Alice Walton's practice of dangling money in front of cash strapped colleges to get access to their art is a lamentable development, but her underlying ambition, to build a first class collection in the middle of Arkansas, is a perfectly good one.
Meanwhile, though Mural may be tucked away in Iowa, by no means has it dropped out of the art historical story. Its crucial importance to Pollock's development is well understood. Salmon suggests that if the picture had been in the possession of the Museum of Modern Art in New York for the past half century it would probably be recognized now as the greatest American painting of all time, thanks to MOMA's power to promote its holdings to the top of the art historical rankings. But that overstates Mural's significance. It was a breakthrough for Pollock. But it's a transitional painting, not a culmination, which is what his drip paintings are. It's important as a turning point between the congested imagery of Pollock's earlier work and the freer gestures of his drip paintings, between the Pollock who painted with his wrist and the Pollock who painted with his entire body.
And for the record yeah, I've actually seen the thing — though I'll admit it was not until it came to New York for MOMA's big Pollock retrospective ten years ago.
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Richard, thanks for the kind words.
To your points:
1) I'm inherently mistrustful of slippery-slope arguments, especially when there's no empirical evidence to back them up. I'm not talking about legitimizing asset-stripping, I'm talking about bringing Mural to a home worthy of it. They're two different things, and I do believe with some reason that this particular painting is sui generis.
2) I never mentioned major cities. I frankly don't care much what city Mural is in, although there's a strong case to be made for it to remain in America. Bilbao is actually a fantastic example of a museum which is very much on the art world's radar, even if it's not a major city. I might add the Villa Panza in Vicenze, the Chinati Foundation, and many others. What I care about is great art being where it belongs, which is not necessarily in a major city, but is necessarily in a major collection, or at least regularly exhibited in major collections. And the University of Iowa is never going to be a major collection.
3) Am I really overstating Mural's significance? You say that it's "a transitional painting, not a culmination" -- but isn't that precisely what makes it so important? Couldn't the same be said of the Desmoiselles? I'd be interested to hear which paintings you think rank above it on the list, given that art-historical importance is at least as relevant to such rankings as intrinsic aesthetics.
I, too, have seen the work only at the MoMA retrospective ten years ago. It was stunning. Do you really think that if it had been at MoMA the whole time, we wouldn't think more highly of it?
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I was fortunate enough to be a student at the University of Iowa and regularly enjoyed sitting in front of the massive Mural. The U of I Art Museum is free and open to the public. It is a quiet museum with minimal whispering and seldom crowding. The museum is the type of place where someone can thoroughly take in a painting, devouring every detail.
MoMA, while a fine institution, does not reward it's patrons with these very basic levels of enjoyment. You are a hurried art enthusiast, scuttled about, trying to get the most of your lofty admission fee. You are bumped into as novices gawk and point.
Peggy Guggenheim donated the Mural to the University of Iowa in 1951 because she recognized Iowa City's unique metropolitan qualities. The art school was considered "The Greenwich Village of the West". Iowa City is still a global city that influences art and language.
Simply, that some only saw Mural in MoMA is more telling about those viewers, than it is about the worthiness of Iowa City, and the University of Iowa Art Museum. As an art enthusiast I seek out art in some of the smallest of venues you can imagine, an old church, a middle school, a collectors library. The intimacy allowed in these space is priceless.
I would like to leave you with a poem that I wrote while sitting in front of Mural as a student in creative writing. I hope you enjoy it as much as I enjoyed the quiet moment in writing in creating it.
On Jackson Pollock's Mural (1943)
Rolling strokes of blue and black with
Splattered streaks
Of red,
Like a Motel 6 bathroom
Fresh with bloodImagined faces and testis
Coalesce from dream clouds
Of paint, where screaming
Ghosts reach up over an
Android skull – brain exposedA falcon beak drips fresh of yellow,
The yoke
Of yesterday's broken shell.
White bone, cracked by black
And paradise blue dripsColored firestorm, a vomit of Egg
salad, where
Images are imagined,
But violent confusion is
Chaotically clear, like a universe
Ready to conform
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