Modernism, high modernism and postmodernism
“Modernism” and “postmodernism” are slippery terms, especially when
it comes to art. They were protean even at their starts (which was
pretty concurrent, right around end of the first World War), and they
still have sweeping applications.
You’ll hear the both terms applied to the same music,
architecture, and even furniture. They’re pretty interchangeable to
most people. We recognize an artist like Picasso as a “Modernist,”
but is Jackson Pollock (a contemporary) a post-Modern? (Picasso
outlived Pollock by 17 years.) And we still use both terms to
describe artists, nearly a hundred years after their start.
It becomes ridiculous, which, in and of itself, can be a
characteristic of postmodernism. I thought of this as I stood in
front of a collage by Paul Darrow in Peter Blake Gallery (326 N.
Coast Highway). The title is “Artist” (19 1/2x16 3/4), and it’s an
elaborate joke that takes in both the spectator and the artist
himself.
Collage is a twentieth-century invention. Both the surrealists and
the modernists used it, working objects and bits of paper into
paintings. What makes this postmodern is its irony, its wry glance at
art itself.
Darrow’s “Artist” uses an old book, torn and in the last stages of
disintegration. The book’s brown cloth cover forms the ground, and
Darrow builds up layers of irony by placing a faded page of text,
nearly transparent with age, right in front of the viewer’s eye. The
word “artist” is clearly visible, printed on the page. A broken piece
of plastic seems to have been reverse-painted, and is framed in white
cardboard so that it almost looks like a Polaroid (a very temporary
photograph). Lumps of glue-like material form the last layer. A
broken wooden frame surrounds it all, a frame within the frame of the
collage.
The thing about collage that makes it postmodern is that it
rejects values that made art an object of worship, a symbol of
immortality. All collage is temporary. Its materials are so fragile,
such works will only exist for a limited amount of time. It also uses
this irony against itself. In Darrow’s “Artist,” not only is this
work temporary, but so is art and the artist. The book becomes a
multi-layered metaphor and a literal statement at the same time,
making its own disintegration its subject.
But then, what is modernism? It, too, reacted against the
19th-century worship of art’s immortality. Really, in the end, you
can say that modernism was unable to totally shake off the love of
passionate expression that runs through all of art’s history. It
retains its connection to the past.
Look, for instance, at the large canvases of James Leonard,
currently covering the walls of Marion Meyer Contemporary Art (354 N.
Coast Highway). You can see there the legacy of what was called “High
Modernism”--the color fields of Mark Rothko and the “action
paintings” of Jackson Pollock. Leonard nods to his predecessors in
abstract expressionism, but has clearly developed his work into a
mature style full of energy and passion. There is lightheartedness
here, but this work is no joke. Its earnestness makes it “modern.”
Leonard works in acrylic. This gives the canvases a flatness that
recognizes and transcends the limitations of painting (that your
surface is, basically, two dimensional and framed in space) by
embracing them. You should also know that acrylics require a certain
amount of speed. They dry quickly, so if you’re going to blend on the
canvas you have to work fast.
Start by looking at “Color Moves” (68x88). Its large size should
tell you that this canvas will require your time. It’s also crawling
with color: red, blue, yellow, green, purple, orange, all with high
saturation. They’re not exactly stock colors--Leonard has mixed
paints. But he mostly relies on pulling layers of color through each
other. He uses white like a master, allowing it to pick up the hue of
the colors around it but still retain its “whiteness.”
This operation is on a huge scale in “Color Moves” (a lot of
movement was involved in its creation, no doubt). There’s so much
paint layered on the canvas, if you look closely, you can see where
it has warped under the weight.
To see how modernism’s energy and confidence play out in
expressionism, look at “Collection of Stars” (48x68) and “Flying in
Red” (36x60). These paintings involve underpaint that flows across
the canvas in bands, but they are only visible in the places where
Leonard has cut into the top layers of paint with a palette knife.
This top layer is semi-translucent white in “Collection of Stars” and
vivid crimson in “Flying in Red.”
Paul Darrow’s collages are on view though April 28 at Peter Blake
Gallery. James Leonard’s show is at Marion Meyer Contemporary Art
through May 15.
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