Art Museums are Only for Certain Kinds of People…

That was a message I heard often during my years in the museum world. It could be a NATO – No Action, Talk Only – environment where diversity on all fronts – museum staff, artists in the collection, programming – was often faux aspirational rather than intentional. Ignoring the obvious, many of my colleagues were baffled by the fact that we could not attract more diverse audiences.

I felt a flicker of hope when I read the New York Times’ Night Out with Jerrod Carmichael article about the young, African-American comedian’s recent swing through the Whitney Museum of American Art. Though he was not represented in the works he saw, his take on the art was refreshing. He viewed it on his terms, relating to what could have been the un-relatable because art that reflects who he is and where he’s from still seems to be missing. Hopefully other people of color, young and old, will visit museums the way Jerrod Carmichael did. Even though they often won’t find their experience represented in a collection they can appreciate what they see by making of it what they will. If museums – who use everyone’s tax dollars – saw a broader audience, would they begin to collect and staff for a broader audience? If they come, will they build it? It would be interesting to find out.

Comedians seem to be the sages of these times (think Jon Stewart, Larry Wilmore and earlier, Dick Gregory and George Carlin) so perhaps Jerrod Carmichael can use his sense and sensibilities to help un-pucker the art world a bit. Diversity of color, shape, size, subject, perspective, ideas and intent are what make the arts wonderful – the audience should also reflect that.

Click here to read the Times article.

Good News from Paris: Romare Bearden’s Paris Odyssey Exhibition Opens

Circe by Romare BeardenIn my novel in progress, Provenance,  visual art and artists in Paris between the World Wars are key characters. Then, as now, in the shadow of conflict and tragedy, art in Paris thrived. Case in point: Monique Wells, who blogs from Paris on Entrée to Black Paris shared her recent envy-worthy experience at the opening of a fascinating exhibition, Romare Bearden’s Paris Odyssey This rich exhibition, at the Columbia Global Center in Paris, features Bearden’s work based on The Odyssey  as well as several Bearden paintings based on jazz in the City of Lights. Paris Odyssey  also highlight works by Henri Matisse, including Matisse’s landmark book, Jazz (1947). The artist is thought to be a central influence on Bearden’s art.

This may not be the ideal time to travel to Paris but to experience this exhibition, you will certainly wish you were there.

From the press release: Romare Bearden’s Paris Odyssey is organized by the Smithsonian Institution Traveling Exhibition Service in cooperation with the Romare Bearden Foundation and Estate and the DC Moore Gallery. The show was conceived and curated by Robert O’Meally, Columbia’s Zora Neale Hurston Professor of English, and is sponsored by the Stavros Niarchos Foundation. Bearden (1911–1988) was long a Harlem fixture, working for several years in a studio above the famed Apollo Theater, just a few blocks northeast of (the Columbia  University) campus.

Image:
Circe
Romare Bearden
1977 Collage of various papers with foil, paint, and graphite on fiberboard
Image courtesy of Professor Robert O’Meally

Congratulations Kehinde Wiley! Well, mostly…

160749_K2Flashy: lacking in substance or flavor; momentarily dazzling; superficially attractive; ostentatious or showy often beyond the bounds of good taste ; marked by gaudy brightness.
Merriam-Webster Dictionary

Great News! Artist Kehinde Wiley will be awarded the U.S. Department of State Medal of Arts by Secretary of State John Kerry in a ceremony on January 21 for “substantive commitment to the U.S. State Department’s cultural diplomacy outreach through the visual arts.” The award was first given during the 50th anniversary of Art in Embassies program in 2012.

The honor was reported by the art press, with one interesting take…

Artnet News noted that Wiley is “Known primarily for his large-scale painting of young African Americans, depicted in the style of European royal portraits…”

Artfix Daily said, “Secretary of State John Kerry will present the medal to Yale-educated Wiley who is known for his portraits of people with brown or black skin in heroic poses, representing saints, and oftentimes set against vibrant backgrounds.”

However, ArtNews reported Wiley honor by saying the artist is, “Known for his flashy painting that depict black men and women in the style of Old Master portraiture…”

Flashy? Really? Oh come now.

What Impact Art?

The visual arts are a primary theme in my novel, Provenance. Throughout the story my characters use art to enlightened, inspire, rescue, and even redeem themselves; demonstrating that art is more than just paintings and pictures. Art has impact; it is a social, political, economic, educational and cultural force.

In a recent video posted by Big Think, curator Sarah Lewis illustrates that point with images and history. Well worth watching.

Art or Soup, Soup or Art

In Jane Wagner‘s 1985 masterpiece, “Search for Signs of Intelligent Life in the Universe,” Lily Tomlin embodies characters with still relevaniStock_000001933707Smallt questions about how our society got where it is and where the hell we are headed. What is inspired and what is simply insipid?

Wagner’s script and Tomlin’s performance nail that question with Trudy, a homeless bag lady, as she ponders art is our society by holding up two found objects – a can of Campbell’s soup and an Andy Warhol Campbell Soup print. “Soup or art, art or soup?” she asks looking back and forth between the two.

I had the same dilemma when I saw a recent story today on Tida Swinton’s performance piece at MoMA – she is sleeping in a glass box in a gallery, is that art or is it soup? Soup or art? Like Trudy I’m gonna have to ponder this but I’m thinking Swinton’s performance would go well with crackers.