Letter to the Editor: Stuart Davis

Letter to the Editor: Stuart Davis

I am more than grateful for these thoughts from Vered Lieb about my essay on Stuart Davis. Upon her request I am posting them here as a letter to the editor:

I did not want to let your last essay go by without letting you know how right I believe you are about the many facets you touch upon while reviewing the Stuart Davis show at the Whitney—including the catering to current art market dizziness by curators, rather then the true dictates of good art history.

I do very much like how you have evolved in your writing and therefore your understanding of art history and the fact that you evince the capacity to write about painting as if you painted as well.

That is the highest marks I can give an art critic, that they have become capable of entering the process and experiencing art from a physical standpoint as well as a mental approach.

Stuart Davis was one of my early childhood heroes.  My parents had a few books around the house about him (along with many others) and I just gravitated to his work. I also adored Michelangelo, de Kooning and Mondrian, from the same library in my parents home.  So that’s pretty eclectic for a little kid.But I always thought of Davis as an abstract artist.  Now my mother’s close friends, Ben Shahn and the Soyer brothers, their work I knew was not abstract.

When I grew up I always responded with a smile to any Stuart Davis I saw.  I still do.  It cannot be that Mr. Davis never experienced any sadness or suffering in his life because we all are too aware that the human condition is the same for all. And there is an interesting contrast with Edward Hopper who was painting at pretty much the same time. Rather I think that Davis must have made a decision to paint, as de Kooning once said about the place from where his art stems, from “joy.”

I applaud you for not seeing him as the father of Pop art, but rather (as I see him)  within the continuum ofa very American Abstract Expressionist movement. He really knew how to put that paint down on a canvas and though his strokes are not de Koonings or Pollocks, they are strokes and a way of application that is his.  His sense of cubistic space was spot on and he never lets you down with his composition.  His use of words is about as literal as de Kooning’s use ofembedding newspaper or Motherwell’s use of French cigarette wrappers.  Neither of those two artists would be hailed as progenitors of the Pop (Picabia would seem closer for that role.)

I do think that it is important to praise and affirm the one voice that will give the lie to the passive acceptance of revisionism.  Thank you once again for being that voice!

Bushwick Chronicle

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Bushwick Chronicle

Photographer Meryl Meisler and writer James Panero discuss "Bushwick Chronicle," their exhibition on view at Stout Projects, Brooklyn, October 1-30, 2016.

BUSHWICK CHRONICLE

Photography by Meryl Meisler

Writing by James Panero

Exhibition: October 1 – 30, 2016

Hours: Saturdays and Sundays, 1 – 5pm and by appointment

Opening reception:

Saturday, October 1st, 4 – 6pm

Gallery Talk & Podcast:

Saturday, October 1st, 5pm

STOUT PROJECTS

55 Meadow St. #310 Brooklyn, NY 11206 L train to Grand Street

IMAGE DOWNLOAD, WALL TEXTS MEDIA PACK

PHOTO: Bushwick Chronicle: Meryl Meisler and James Panero © Meryl Meisler 2016

BUSHWICK CHRONICLE: Photography by Meryl Meisler, Writing by James Panero, an exhibition at Stout Projects opening over Bushwick Open Studios and on view through October 2016, recognizes Bushwick as a historically significant artistic community now in need of documentation.

Over the summer of 2016 through a series of open calls, Meryl and James invited the artists, gallerists, journalists, and organizers of Bushwick to gather for group portraits inspired by Nina Leen’s 1950 portrait of the Abstract Expressionists in “The Irascibles,” Timothy Greenfield-Sanders's 1985 series “The New Irascibles,” and Art Kane’s 1958 portrait of Jazz Musicians in “A Great Day in Harlem.” These photographs were taken with a medium format camera using black-and-white film, returning Meryl to her analogue roots and printing in the dark-room. The exhibition of these new photographs is now paired with Meryl’s illustrative painted photographs of Bushwick from the 1980s on, and James’s writing on the neighborhood.

New York is unsentimental. It pushes and pulls, attracts and repels. The only constant is change. For artists these dynamics can be particularly extreme, both inspiring and challenging. For a short time in the long history of this neighborhood, Bushwick, Brooklyn became a place for artists to live, work, and exhibit together. Emerging after the 2008 recession on the periphery of the city’s cultural center, the arts of Bushwick came to be identified with self-creation: a sudden flowering nurtured by a network of self-made institutions, from apartment galleries to non-profit collaborations. Just as in Montparnasse a century ago, no one style dominated the neighborhood’s artistic scene. Instead a spirit of collaboration and DIY experimentation defined it.

As with other historical arts neighborhoods, from Montmartre to Tenth Street, Bushwick will one day cease to be a place of artistic relevance—not necessarily as artists are pushed out, but as non-artists push in. History is often lost in such transitions, which is why the Bushwick community now rightly regards documentation as among its important, lasting self-creations.

 

Meryl Meisler is a photographer who taught art in the Bushwick schools from 1981-1994. Carrying a point & shoot camera to capture what she saw going to, from, and during work, Meryl created the largest known photographic documentation of Bushwick during the era. Upon retiring from the NYC public schools, she began releasing large bodies of previously unseen work. Her monographsA Tale of Two Cities Disco Era Bushwick (Bizarre, 2014) and Purgatory & Paradise SASSY ‘70s Suburbia & The City (Bizarre, 2015) received international acclaim. Meryl is represented by Steven Kasher Gallery.

James Panero is the Executive Editor oTfhe New Criterion , where he writes monthly on art and culture and serves as the magazine’s gallery critic. His “Gallery Chronicle” column has been praised by writers, artists, and collectors for its coverage of the outer boroughs of New York and their alternative art scenes. As a curator he has organized the “The Joe Bonham Project” at Storefront Gallery and “Joe Zucker: Armada” at the National Arts Club. He is a contributing writer to the 2016 Arts in Bushwick publication “Making History.”

Peripheral events:

October 1, 2016– January 1, 2017

BIZARRE, ASSORTED MADNESS & THE UNEXPECTED Photographs by Meryl Meisler, Jean Stéphane Sauvaire and Gregory Baubeau Bizarre Black Box Gallery – 12 Jefferson Street, Brooklyn, NY
Bizarre BOS Opening Party, Saturday, October 1, 9pm – 4am

October 14, 2016 at 4pm

Arts in Bushwick panel discussion with James Panero, Deborah Brown, Loren Munk, and Cynthia Tobar, moderated by Lisa Corinne Davis at DAVID & SCHWEITZER Contemporary – 56 Bogart Street. Brooklyn, NY

Contact:

stoutprojectsnyc@gmail.com

Websites:

stoutprojects.net

jamespanero.com
merylmeisler.com

IN THE NEWS

Bushwick is a historically significant artistic community. I am grateful for the interest around our project of documentation:

BUSHWICK DOCUMENTATION PROJECT with Photographer Meryl Meisler Organized by James Panero, This program was recorded June 4, 2016 in Bushwick Brooklyn.

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Gallery Chronicle (September 2016)

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Gallery Chronicle (September 2016)

THE NEW CRITERION
September 2016

On “Stuart Davis: In Full Swing” at the Whitney Museum of American Art.

One of the many revelations to come out of “The New Spirit: American Art in the Armory Show, 1913,” the excellent exhibition organized three years ago by Gail Stavitsky at the Montclair Art Museum, was a small watercolor of a rowboat on a lake. A blond woman leans over the stern, nearly submerging it in water as she seemingly smiles back at us. Behind her, standing on the upturned bow, a man twists on one leg as he attempts to remove his trousers—startled, it would appear, at our arrival.

Immediate, part quick illustration, part louche intrusion, the work may have been as shocking for its content in 1912 as it would be to us, today, for its attribution. Titled Romance or The Doctor, this watercolor was one of five examples to be put on display in the 1913 Armory Show by none other than Stuart Davis (1892–1964), the American modernist whose work would soon take a bold turn away from such realistic scenes towards angular shapes, flattened colors, and the interweaving of text and imagery.

At the time the promising disciple of Robert Henri and “The Eight,” just twenty-one years old, Davis was among those American artists most affected by the radical examples of European modernism that came stateside for the Armory Show’s infamous three-city tour—a “masochistic reception,” he later recalled, “whereat the naïve hosts are trampled and stomped by the European guests at the buffet.”

Yet with his watercolors exhibited alongside eye-opening examples of modernist painting by Picasso, Matisse, Kandinsky, and Duchamp, Davis also saw the “vindication of the anti-academy position of the Henri School, with developments in undreamed of directions.” The awakening was pure Davis, telling us a great deal of how he saw through the surface of style and looked to deeper meaning, always staying independent of trends. At that time, Davis was one of the artists whose interest in saloon life and popular entertainment would earn him the label of “ash can,” a term meant as opprobrium for his focus on the underbelly of American culture and the one that came to define the movement of his older contemporaries.

The particular genius of Davis’s subsequent modernist direction was how he went on to integrate European stylistic innovation with his unique Ashcan vision. Through the flattening, flickering, fleeting perspectives of modernist composition, Davis did not so much abandon his Ashcan beginnings. Instead he found ways to electrify them, to broadcast the frenetic American century with the syncopation of jazz and to illuminate it with the glow of neon.

Just take his House and Street (1931), from the Whitney’s collection, where windows, fire escapes, garages, smoke stacks, scaffolding, advertising symbols, and campaign signs all come together like the colorful pieces of a jigsaw puzzle framed by the shadows of an elevated train. Or consider the frenzied cataract of Ultra-Marine(1943), a favorite of mine from the Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts, where any lingering sense of single-point perspective is overtaken by Davis’s development of “serial centers” of focus. And then there is The Paris Bit (1959), also from the Whitney, a late masterstroke where colors, silhouettes, signs, and shadow lines seem to reassemble not as a single image but as a long-remembered impression—a deep feeling coming together out of forgotten sights.

So the fact that “Stuart Davis: In Full Swing,” a major, traveling exhibition now at the Whitney Museum of American Art, would omit Davis’s entire early Ashcan development, and instead start its show in the 1920s, would seem to do a curious disservice to both Davis’s own achievements and the understanding of the museum-going public.1

That this omission of “Davis’s decade of apprenticeship” turns out to be a deliberate “interpretive gambit” meant to “depart in significant ways from their predecessors,” as the co-directors of the Whitney and the National Gallery explain in their catalogue preface, is a startling revelation of curatorial intent that hints not only at Davis’s evolving place in the canon of American art but also at the shifting interests of the contemporary American museum.

We are therefore left with an exhibition that is both required viewing for what it reveals of Davis’s American vision but also a flawed, precariously off-balance presentation of that vision. With approximately one hundred works on display, there is, it should be said, much to be thankful for here. Despite the over half-century of Davis research that has followed the artist’s death in 1964, a complete chronology has only recently come to light with the publication of his catalogue raisonné by Ani Boyajian, Mark Rutkoski, William C. Agee, and Karen Wilkin in 2007, as well as—finally—the full access to his archives granted by the artist’s estate. Through her catalogue essay and wall texts, at least, the Whitney’s Barbara Haskell, our most dutiful curator of early American modernism and the co-curator of this exhibition, gives every indication of a deep interest in the full span of Davis’s development, including the early history. Her extensive catalogue chronology, starting with Davis’s childhood in Philadelphia, where his father was a graphic artist and art editor, on through his life and career at the center of bohemian New York, furthermore offers a singular addition to Davis scholarship.

At the same time, it must be increasingly difficult to propose a major museum survey of a canonical artist that relies on scholarship alone and does not attempt realignment and revisionism. Writing in 1965 at the time of Davis’s memorial exhibition, H. H. Arnason of The Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum summed up the then-established consensus: “Davis is almost the only American painter of the twentieth century whose works have transcended every change in style, movement, or fashion.” Such an appreciation only occurs when you consider Davis’s development in his own time. Yet in a reversal of priorities that is fast becoming the norm of museums today, rather than allowing history to challenge our present assumptions, the past must now conform to contemporary diktats. In Davis’s case, this means understanding the artist not on his own terms but for the movement he inadvertently foreshadowed—pop—the one art movement, it would seem, that is now unquestionably allowed to occupy our own time and place.

There is no other reason to start a Davis survey with his paintings of illusionistic flattened packaging of the 1920s than to frame him as a pop artist. And indeed, “framed” is right, since there is reason here to suspect that Davis has been framed. Calling these paintings of consumer products “Davis’s breakthrough,” the exhibition narrows Davis’s achievements to one that merely “merged the bold, hard-edge style of advertising with the conventions of European avant-garde painting.” Forget the fact that this particular imagery is part of an older tradition going back to the nineteenth century in American trompe l’oeil and might be considered something of a tributary in the main currents of his artistic development. Why not instead look to his more innovative cubist still lifes, also from the early 1920s, and now in the collection of the Vilcek Foundation?

Framing the far end of his career, the exhibition likewise gives disproportionate meaning to Davis’s interest in returning to older compositions. The observation that Davis revisited his earlier work is nothing new. In 1965 Arnason noted “how often he experimented with a theme or motif, put it aside, and then years later returned to it and developed it into a major painting or a series of paintings.” Yet here this is treated as divine revelation, of what? Pop seriality, and then some.

In creating this exhibition, Barbara Haskell was joined by Harry Cooper of the National Gallery, who gets equal billing. I suspect much of the pop obsession has originated with this co-curator whose credits include a role in the recent Roy Lichtenstein retrospective. Cooper’s catalogue essay, titled “Unfinished Business: Davis and the Dialect-X of Recursion,” is certainly guilty of blanketing Davis in theoretical cant and, simply put, offering one of the most overwrought examples of art writing I have ever seen—repeatedly exhorting his readers to “let us” join him in his leaps of incredulity. Just let us consider, for instance, Cooper’s take on the painting Memo, a mystical composition from 1956 of angular white lines, letters, and numbers folded into fields of red, green, and black:

Let us take the final step: Memo is a Marxist abstraction . . . the Marxism is present in its absence. (Canceled and preserved: such is Hegel’s mind-bending logic.) It has disappeared and keeps disappearing. Marx is a four-letter word beginning with m.

“Present in its absence” might describe much of the logic in this essay on Davis’s “recursive” imagery, which concludes by again choosing to see what is not there in Davis’s moving final painting:

Finally, the loop has a rapport with the spiral, that geometric figure often invoked to visualize Hegel’s dialectic in its back-and-forth winding ascent to the far-off goal (in The Phenomenology, 1807) of Spirit in possession of itself, outside of time, no longer divided. . . . His last painting, left on his easel at his death and still swaddled in masking tape, includes the word fin, possibly inspired by the last frame of a French movie he had been watching on TV. The word is often taken as a premonition of death, but who can say? Another possibility is that the word, like many of Davis’s, like the painting itself, is just incomplete, unFINished.

The great shame of this exhibition’s pop psychology, or more likely pop psychosis, is how its archival research has indirectly illuminated a more relevant understanding of Davis’s methodology. Far from the superficial coolness of pop, Davis was the hottest of artists. He incorporated the visual landscape of popular culture not as pop commentaries but as personal expressions. He deployed modernist innovations such as cubist simultaneity but, unlike European examples, he looked beneath the surface. Mere “visible phenomena,” as Barbara Haskell explains, “ignored what he believed was true about perception—that it involves the totality of one’s consciousness. He reasoned that if his art were to be truly realistic, it must include his ideas, emotions, and memories of other experiences.”

Davis’s recursions were part of these personal excavations that folded memory, sound, and feeling into ever-evolving compositions. This means that his Rapt at Rappaport’s (1951–52), a painting from middle age, could convey the polka-dot paper of the toy store on Third Avenue and Seventy-ninth Street where his parents once shopped—and where he, at one time, could have been “rapt” in its wrapping. The legacy of Stuart Davis is a similar gift, a feeling for the twentieth century wrapped in its own unique, wonderful packaging.

 

1 “Stuart Davis: In Full Swing” opened at the Whitney Museum of American Art, New York, on June 10 and remains on view through September 25, 2016. The exhibition will be on view at the National Gallery of Art, Washington, D.C. from November 20, 2016, through March 5, 2017; the De Young Museum, San Francisco, from April 8 through August 6, 2017; and the Crystal Bridges Museum of American Art, Bentonville, from September 16, 2017, through January 8, 2018.

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