OpEd: Here we go again!: Ken Johnson’s Art Review “Forged From the Fires of the 1960s: Now Dig This! Art & Black Los Angeles,” at MoMA PS1

By Bridget R. Cooks

On October 1, 2011, Now Dig This! Art & Black Los Angeles 1960-1980 opened at UCLA’s Hammer Museum in Los Angeles with a celebration of over 2,000 in attendance. Curated by Professor Kellie Jones of Columbia University and assisted by research fellow Naima J. Keith, Now Dig This! was a part of the Getty Museum’s ambitious county-wide exhibition project, Pacific Standard Time which focused on art in Los Angeles, 1945-1980 through exhibitions and programs at nearly 100 partner institutions.  Jones’ exhibition revisited the art produced by many of the city’s leading creative Black artists and friends in their circles.  For some visitors, the exhibition introduced them to new names they were unfamiliar with; for others it was a time for remembering and reflection; for many of the artists, whose styles and approaches to the visual world are as variant as their careers, the exhibition was a long overdue recognition of their early work that was made in L.A.

I was lucky enough to be asked by Jones to organize and moderate a panel at the Hammer of four women, now legendary, filmmaker Barbara McCullough, graphic designer Sheila Levrant de Bretteville, curator Josine Ianco-Starrels, and artist Suzanne Jackson. Our two-hour discussion of their careers confirmed the depth of their diverse talents as serious contributors to the era and their influence ever since. The event, like the exhibition, was as much a reunion of long friendships, as it was the introduction of an earlier generation of contemporary artists to a generation of youth who were catching up to the art and film history of the city.

(Watch a video of this event: http://hammer.ucla.edu/watchlisten/watchlisten/show_id/823945/show_type/video?browse=none&category=0&search)

Organized into four sections, Frontrunners, Assembling, Artists/Gallerists, and Post-Minimalism and Performance, the exhibition showed multiple works by over thirty artists. Jones showed objects that had never been exhibited before, as well as art from private collections and public museum storage facilities that had not been available to see by museum audience in decades. Jones’ vision and research were made to seem effortless in the galleries that presented cross-generational conversations between artists within a context of Post-World War II Los Angeles.

What little press the exhibition received in the city agreed that Now Dig This! offered a significant opportunity to enjoy and learn about the history of Black artists in Pacific Standard Time. Los Angeles Times reviewer, Christopher Knight, wrote in his October 11, 2011 review that the exhibition, “tells an important story that is not so much unknown as underknown.” He discusses included works by several artists including painter/gallerist Suzanne Jackson, a young David Hammons, and assemblagists Daniel LaRue Johnson, Noah Purifoy, and Betye Saar. Knight was also provoked to consider possible influence between artists in the exhibition and outside of the exhibition namely regarding the influence of Robert Rauschenberg’s 1967 print Booster (created in Los Angeles’ Gemini Gel studio) on Hammons’ body prints.  Although Hammons is one of the most well-known artists in the exhibition, this kind of intellectual curiosity about the Now Dig This! artists and their work can lead to increased recognition of their importance that will have lasting effects after the exhibition has closed.

(See other L.A. based press about NDT! by Peter Clothier, Jori Finkel, Holly Myers, F. Finley McRae)

Now Dig This! is the only one of the Pacific Standard Time exhibitions that has traveled. After making its New York debut at MoMA PS1 in October 2012, New York Times arts reviewer Ken Johnson attacked the validity of the exhibition, and made condescending criticisms of its curator, and the artists.

(See Johnson’s review: http://www.nytimes.com/2012/10/26/arts/design/now-dig-this-art-black-los-angeles-at-moma-ps1.html)

E-mails between artists, art historians, cultural historians, gallerists, and museum professionals quickly circulated about the review. In response many submitted letters to the Times in criticism of Johnson’s review. I submitted the following letter to the editor (The Times limits letters to 150 words):

Letter to the Editor

Response to Ken Johnson’s Art Review “Forged From the Fires of the 1960s: Now Dig This! Art & Black Los Angeles,” at MoMA PS1

How disappointing to read Ken Johnson’s review of the Now Dig This! exhibition. His review echoes those of Hilton Kramer’s NYT 1970s reviews of exhibitions of art by Black artists (See “’Black Art’ and Expedient Politics,” June 7, 1970, and “Black Art or Merely Social History?” June 26, 1977).  Johnson’s review presents the real paradox concerning exhibitions of art by Black artists: Art critics are unable to reconcile Black ability with artistic production. Johnson makes a strange proposal that art is best understood by viewers who have the same race as the artist.  Indeed, all art is a reflection of the artist’s life experience. However, looking at work by a Black artist does not pose “a problem for its [presumably White] audience” or divide viewers by race.  Ultimately, Johnson’s review argues that the lack of knowledge about Black artists and the history of exhibitions of their art leads to misinformed reviews.

I knew of at least three other people who had written similar letters and we all waited for the Times to respond. In the meantime, a petition at ipetitions.com was started by Colleen Asper, Anoka Faruqee, Steve Locke, Dushko Petrovich and William Villalongo, signed by over a thousand people, and sent to the Times on December 3, 2012.

I sent a follow-up letter to the editor to find out when selected letters to the editor about Johnson’s review would be published, I received this unsigned single sentence e-mail from the Times: “Our policy is not to publish letters on reviews.” This was disappointing news for two primary reasons. First, not publishing our letters was an act of censorship that allowed Johnson’s review to stand as the uncontested consensus of thought about the exhibition. Second, the publication of Times letters to the editor has been a way to contribute to and document public discourse about politics, art, and culture. This policy ends the potential of that discourse in the Times.

In response to the Times, I sent a link to the petition and asked for a more substantial response to the petition’s demand for a response to Johnson’s racist and sexist journalism. Jonathan Landman, culture editor for the Times sent a response to the authors of the petition.

(See Landman’s response and the authors’ replies: http://galleristny.com/2012/12/heres-the-new-york-times-response-to-the-ken-johnson-petition/)

This back and forth between the New York Times and anti-racist and anti-sexist interests in the art world is significant because it offers proof that the realization of Black artistic talent, respect, and freedom by mainstream art critics is still a struggle. This is not news to most of us, but it is something that many of my students and others their age do not acknowledge as truth. It is also important for the older liberal multiculturalist contingent to see that we have not overcome all forms of oppression, nor are Black artists seen as equal to White artists today. Specifically concerning the New York Times’ history of racist art reviews, although Hilton Kramer passed away on March 27, 2012, his philosophy of anti-Blackness has been renewed through their choice of Ken Johnson.  This kind of replacement shows that there is a deep investment in White supremacy at the Times, and that time passing does not signal, or equate, the development of political thought and progress.

My friend, the New York based artist Dennis Delgado, shared with me Kenya Robinson’s November 30, 2012 post “Soul Seasoning” from the Huffington Post. The performance artist expresses her annoyance for all of the attention that Johnson’s review received, and questions why those of us in the “Othered Art World” are so put out by Johnson’s review. I like Robinson’s post and I agree, likely as many others who wrote letters to the Times and signed the petition do, that we don’t expect the White art world to change because anti-Black racism is an American tradition presented as a matter of quality control in the art world. Our struggle against racism, and the documentation of our contestation must continue along side the continuation of racial hatred. Black artists, curators, art historians, and art enthusiasts are not waiting for racism to end to get our work done. We’ve never needed the mainstream art world’s approval to be who we are.  The discourse around the Times review is more evidence of the stand-off between those who know that Black life is valuable, and those who fight to protect the privileges of Whiteness.

Bridget R. Cooks
Associate Professor
Departments of Art History and African American Studies
University of California, Irvine
Author of Exhibiting Blackness: African Americans and the American Art Museum (University of Massachusetts Press: 2011)

I recommend the following links:

Editor’s Note: Now Dig This! Art & Black Los Angeles 1960–1980 remains on view at MoMA PS1 in New York City until March 11, 2013: http://momaps1.org/exhibitions/view/352

Art Exhibition: «Esthétique de la rencontre» at Fondation Clément

EXH: Distance and Desire: Encounters with the African Archive @ The Walther Collection

Distance and Desire
Encounters with the African Archive
Part II: Contemporary Reconfigurations

The Walther Collection presents Part II of Distance and Desire: Encounters with the African Archive, a three-part exhibition series curated by Tamar Garb. Contemporary Reconfigurations offers new perspectives on the African photographic archive, reimagining its diverse histories and changing meanings. The exhibition centers on photography and video by African and African American artists who engage critically with the archive through parody, appropriation, and reenactment.

Carrie Mae Weems introduces the themes of Contemporary Reconfigurations with her powerful series “From Here I Saw What Happened And I Cried,” a revision of nineteenth and twentieth-century anthropometric photographs of African Americans, overlaid with texts by the artist. Sammy Baloji and Candice Breitz rework ethnographic photographs onto large-scale collages. Zwelethu Mthethwa and Zanele Muholi examine sexuality, costume, and ritual. Samuel Fosso and Philip Kwame Apagya create exuberantly staged studio portraiture, using elaborate backdrops and sets to critique stereotypes and identities.

Sabelo Mlangeni’s black and white photo-essay, “Imbali,” documents the reed dances of KwaZulu-Natal, showing the display of virgins vying to be chosen as brides. Pieter Hugo’s series “There’s a Place in Hell for Me and My Friends” examines ethnicity and skin tonalities through anthropological mug shots. Working in video, Berni Searle performs as a statuesque deity engaged in domestic labor in “Snow White,” and Andrew Putter gives an indigenous voice to the effigy of Marie van Riebeeck, wife of the first Dutch settler in the area known today as Cape Town, in “Secretly I Will Love You More.”

For this group of artists, a stereotype or ethnographic vision in one era may provide material for quotation, irreverent reworking, or satirical performance in another. Illustrating how the African archive — broadly understood as an accumulation of representations, images, and objects — figures in selected contemporary lens-based practices, the exhibition stages a dialogue between the distance of the past and the desiring gaze of the present.

Contemporary Reconfigurations will be on view from November 30, 2012 to March 9, 2013.
Opening Hours: Thursday – Saturday, 12pm-6pm

The Walther Collection Project Space
526 West 26th Street, Suite 718
New York, NY 10001

http://walthercollection.com/#/main@nyspace_main

CFP: Photography as Witness: Power and Politics, the charged landscape of the 21st century

EXTENDED DEADLINE EXTENDED DEADLINE
NEW DEADLINE: DECEMBER 14, 2012

Call for Participation in a Juried Exhibition

Photography as Witness: Power and Politics, the charged landscape of the 21st century

Exhibition: January 25 through March 9, 2013

This exhibition seeks artists whose photographic practice interrogates contemporary issues, and documents our global conditions and challenges. Technology has extended our awareness of events taking place around the world from the Arab Spring, the Occupy Movement to the ongoing poverty caused by corporate greed, corrupt governments, criminal organizations, and religious and tribal violence. These challenges affect the two-third of the world, emergent nations and under-reported regions of the West. It is the witnessing of the devastation of humanity and the environment that moves us to action.

For submission guidelines go to: http://www.geneseo.edu/galleries/photography-witness-juried-exhibition

JOB: Carruthers Internship @ Birmingham Museum of Art, Spring 2013

Carruthers Internship – Spring Semester 2013

Education: Graduate student

Area of Study: Art History, Visual Culture, History, African American Studies, or American Studies

Purpose: To support exhibition projects related to the 50th anniversary of the Sixteenth Street Baptist Church bombing.

Responsibilities:
·        Assist with artist research which includes but not limited to exhibition history, biographical information, and bibliographical history.
·        Write artist biographies and descriptions of art for museum publications.
·        Create artist files for artists involved with commemorative projects.
·        Help coordinate performance projects.
·        Manage communication between the curatorial department and artists and exhibition lenders.
·        Other duties as assigned.

The Carruthers Intern will have the opportunity to contribute to the Museum’s public and support group programs.

Examples include:
·        ArtBreaks
·        Lunch & Learn
·        Gallery Talks

Special Skills
·        Strong interest in African American art and history
·        Good verbal and written communication skills
·        Strong visual analysis skills
·        Extensive experience with library, archival, and web-based research

Time period: January 14 – May 3, 2013
Hours per week: 15-20 hours
The Carruthers Intern will receive a $3,000 stipend.

Additional application material: 10-15 pp writing sample from a research or seminar paper

Deadline is November 1, 2012. Please check out
https://artsbma.org/about/internships/item/642-carruthers-internship-curatorial

For more information, contact Anne Forschler-Tarrasch at aforschler@artsbma.org

Mola Textiles and the Kuna Indians

lacma's avatarUnframed The LACMA Blog

Molas come from the kalu Tuipis.
It was a dangerous place
where skilled scissor-users lived…
They were very beautiful women . . . 

—”Black Vulture” recounted by E.G. from Mulatupu

“Picture yourself in a boat on a river
With tangerine trees and marmalade skies

Somebody calls you, you answer quite slowly
A girl with kaleidoscope eyes

Cellophane flowers of yellow and green
Towering over your head

Look for the girl with the sun in her eyes
And she’s gone”

—Paul McCartney; John Lennon

Either of these quotes above could be invoked to describe the mola textiles in LACMA’s Stitching Worlds: Mola Art of the Kuna on view in the Art of the Americas building through the fall. With kaleidoscopic designs and layers of psychedelic colors carefully cut out and stitched together by craftswomen, molas are intriguing modern textiles. The term mola—the Kuna word for “cloth”—refers to brightly…

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PUB: THIN BLACK LINE(S)

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Lubaina Himid, Thin Black Line(s): Moments and Connections During the 1980s for the Women Artists (2011)

The exhibition Thin Black Line(s) closed at Tate Britain in March, but the exhibition catalog is an invaluable record of the show’s commemoration of “Black British art” in the 1980s. The catalog reproduces the work of Sutapa Biswas, Sonia Boyce, Lubaina Himid, Claudette Johnson, Ingrid Pollard, Veronica Ryan, and Maud Sulter; it also includes archival material documenting that decade of creative and progressive political alliances among these artists of African, Asian, and Caribbean descent. ISBN 978-0-9571579-0-3