Can We Say, ‘Primitive’?
Prehistoric Altamira cave paintings, France
In the 1990s, I recall watching Sister Wendy Beckett, the reluctant celebrity spokesperson for a popular PBS series on art appreciation. This sequestered nun, who for decades had lived under a vow of silence, had gained notoriety for her views on famous works of art and now stood in her nun’s habit waxing vociferously before the prehistoric Altamira cave paintings. Self-taught and passionate about the history of art, she gestured at the figures of stampeding bison and elk behind her and said, “These images are 15,000 years old. In the millennia that followed, art didn’t get any better than this, just different.”
In a few words, she summed up the argument for why we should not apply the word, ‘primitive’ to any artistic or material object from cultures far removed from our own tastes and values, simply because we do not understand them.
Early 20th C. Yombe maternity figure, Rep. of Congo
On this, All Saints’ Day (November 1st), cultures throughout the world travel to cemeteries to celebrate the lives of deceased loved ones and ancestors, long-dead. It is a joyous event, with food shared and offered up and tender care given to the graves of the deceased. As hard as this may be to understand, are these rituals anymore primitive or morbid than our pagan celebration of Halloween the day before?
So, as we seek to understand the art and cultures of other peoples, especially in this period of inclusivity in our own history, where does the word ‘primitive’ fit in our lexicon—or does it at all?
Mid-18th C. graven image, Wakefield, Massachusetts
Nineteenth century adventurism and usurpation of far-flung lands led to many abuses. Western cultural ethnocentrism and misogyny, combined with common practices of tomb raiding, careless and heavy-handed archeological ‘digs’, amounting to blatant theft of cultural artifacts, led to the unregulated and unquestioning sale of untold priceless artifacts to countless private collectors and newly-founded museums in many western countries.
These illicit activities had the effect of bringing to public attention new categories of art and artifacts that defied aesthetic understanding and categorization, under conventional Western terms. The word, ‘primitive’ was often used to describe objects of great inherent beauty and value, but, as it happened, just not to those currently in possession of them! It became a term that was applied to cultural artifacts that people were seeing, but not understanding. The rich symbolism, iconographic significance and ritualistic import of these art forms were left behind, as surely as the societies from which they had been taken.
Only with the increased awareness that the emerging field of cultural anthropology brought to the table in the mid-twentieth century, did questions begin to be raised about the possible inherent beauty and significance of these plundered treasures, culled from worlds so far apart and unfamiliar from our own.
H.W. Janson’s well-know 1962 text, ‘History of Art’, devotes nine full pages to a discussion of ‘primitive art’. Featuring mostly African, Inuit, Pacific islands and native American sculpture, Janson’s narrative is a compelling and useful read—because it offers what I believe is a helpful definition of what ‘primitive’ is and how it can be independently and respectfully applied to cultures, separate from their art forms, in various parts of the world.
Pablo Picasso, Les Demoiselles d’Avignon, 1907, Mus. Modern Art, NYC
Thus, Janson defines ‘primitive’ in a social/cultural context as; “societies remote, isolated and set apart physically from the rest of the world; using Stone Age or ancient tool methods; rural and self-sufficient; tribal, not city-states; without written records, thus, ahistorical; static, not dynamic or progressively expansive; defensive toward outsiders and favoring ancestral worship.”
Karl Schmidt-Ruttloff, Maidchen aus Kowno, 1918
This behavioral definition, while largely outmoded in today’s world of global interconnectivity, sheds light on a useful distinction between a cluster of societal postures that make for a collective identity, on the one hand, and the art and artifacts produced by those same societies, on the other. Though socially isolated, this particular definition does not detract from the fact that these ‘primitive’ communities may be capable of creating objects with all the inherent qualities of beauty, form and balance that rival objects more familiar to our Western eyes. Thus, primitive is a term reserved for the chosen lifestyle of selected cultures or peoples, not necessarily for their material output.
By the early 21st century, many art history texts had had relegated any discussion of ‘primitive’ to the primitivist movement of the early modern period. Then, artists like Erich Heckel, Karl Schmidt-Rottluff and Henri Rousseau sought to capture the simplicity of form and composition seen in works from Africa, Columbian America and the pacific islands, as well as children’s art, folk and naïve art (now called ‘outsider art’) and even that of the mentally ill! Like other artists of that time (including Picasso), there was a shared assumption about the primal authenticity and purity of form that elevated these foreign objects to the realm of the mysterious and iconic—yet another likely disservice to their practical and functional indigenous origins.
So, elegant art and artifacts can emanate from so-called primitive cultures, although fewer such societies functioning in isolation from the rest of the world exist today. It is important to note however, that their art is not, by definition, primitive. Our view of it may be affected by our own ignorance or misinformation, but not necessarily by any limitation in their vision or ability to convey symbolic meaning through the objects they, themselves, value and revere. -RF
Haitian Relief Effort- A Special Request
Our minds become numb and our eyes glaze over as the harsh reality of yet another natural tragedy in the world enters the corner of our visual field. Haiti, the poorest country in the western hemisphere, has once again been devastated by disaster. Having the misfortune to be built over one the many tectonic faults that thread their way across the Caribbean Ocean floor, Port-au-Prince was, at best, a house of cards before the recent quake. Afterward, the rubble that was once the city may serve as the final resting place for thousands.
This is not so much a matter of the quake’s intensity (a more powerful tremor in San Francisco Bay in 1989 claimed 83 lives). This is a story of poverty and desperation for a people that know no relief from sorrow. Hurricanes, civil unrest and unemployment at 80% leave most of the population living permanently on the precipice of despair. Now with an estimated 200,000 dead, 350,000 injured and three million more desperate people displaced onto the streets, the community of Haiti is on the brink of violence and social collapse.More
Pinta Latin American Modern & Contemporary Art Fair, 2009, Scores Big Success
Three years ago the newly hatched, Pinta Latin American Modern & Contemporary Art Fair, jumped bravely into the ever-growing, melange of art fairs and biennales. Opening at the Metropolitan Pavilion/Altman Building in New York City, “The fair’s primary aim”, according to its director, Diego Costa Peuser, was “to bring Latin American art to the world.” As the only art fair in the U.S. featuring works exclusively from Latin American artists, Pinta was an immediate hit. Continuing its winning streak this past November, with double the number of exhibiting galleries, the fair stormed into the city. Again the crowds came. Roughly speaking, half the 60 galleries (all ensconced in their own mini spaces) were U.S.- based (most all from New York and Miami); most of the rest hailing from South America, the Caribbean Islands, and Mexico. With just five galleries from Madrid and one from Berlin, European presence was scant. In addition to increased attendance and public sales during the traditional 4-day event, purchases by art museums like the Tate Modern in London, the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston, and El Museo Del Barrio in New York, sky rocketed. Capitalizing on their successful track record, and hoping to conquer the European market, as well, Pinta will bring the mountain to Moses, when they take their fair to London, in June, 2010.
above: Carmen Mariscal, Recuerdo (Remember), 2008More
Recent Paintings by Connecticut Artist, Lenny Moskowitz, Currently on View
The seaside village of Stony Creek, Connecticut lays under a blanket of white. The January wind whips up a dusting of confection, frosting any figure or form that stands its ground in defiance of the cold with sweet, but merciless, revenge. The Willoughby Wallace Library Art Gallery sits close by the harbor road and tonight, it welcomed guests to an exhibition entitled, Landscapes in Light: Recent Paintings by Lenny Moskowitz. Modestly appointed, the gallery and its installation of colorful works by Moskowitz served as a bastion of light and warmth against the night’s chill.
His work recalls the colors and saturated light of a summer day not so long ago. The collection of twenty-four works includes figurative paintings, a single still life and a generous presentation of landscapes, completed en plein air. The paintings reflect the spontaneity and confidence of an artist who is comfortable with bold color and equally at ease with the deconstruction of nature as abstraction. “A good painting is as much observed into existence as it is painted into existence”, the artist explains. “Paint is liquid, spontaneous and unpredictable. For me, working with an understanding of the subject, but without an attachment to the technical demands of the process, results in a more honest translation.”More
Diane Dewey Offers Key Points on Art Valuation
Recently, Diane Dewey, Contributing Editor for ARTES e-Magazine gave a presentation in which she described to the audience what she, as an appraiser, looks for when evaluating a work of art. These factors, that give value to art, are one aspect of the appreciation of an artwork. “When a work speaks to us we should listen,” she noted. The following clip is an excerpt from her talk and deals with two important themes: the importance of quantifiable information such as artist name; date; medium; signature; dimensions; subject matter; condition; provenance; and current artist’s market. She also hastened to include the vital eleventh theme—a more subjective and elusive one – “your own view of the work.”
Dewey explained the personal aspect of buying art: “The symbols of paint, chisel or pencil markings made may replicate the artist’s sensibility, but we as viewers seek imagery that conforms to or stimulates our own sensibilities. The process of art appreciation is like matching a fingerprint. We seek ourselves, our own imprint, what turns us on, or what articulates a thought or emotion that for us may be unexpressed, but which is embodied in a given work. That resonance, combined with a quality of execution and the quantitative data I described, engenders an understanding of the value of art for us all.”
Click on the image below to hear a portion of Diane Dewey’s talk:
Chinese Contemporary Art is Symbolic of a Changing Market
Ancient pictographs depict China as the Land of the Middle Kingdom, suspended half way between heaven and earth and blessed by splendid isolation from the rest of the world. In this century, this sprawling nation of 1.3 billion sits squarely in the real world, striving to find a place and a voice in a vast and rapidly-expanding global economic marketplace. In spite of its transition to new-found prosperity, China remains a country of stark contrasts. The language of wealth, materialism and a new-found lifestyle for a privileged few co-exists with the poverty and illiteracy of a far-flung and uninformed rural populous, divided, as it were, by language and centuries of isolation and ethnic conflict.
The hide-bound and myopic patriarchal leadership of the People’s Republic of China (PRC) regularly co-mingles with the rapidly-emerging intellectual and business communities of the urban centers of financial power and influence; each continues to view the other warily and with mutual distrust. Both factions of the political/social divide, however, reap the enhanced financial and political benefits that free trade policies offer. Additionally, more open access to unfiltered news, spawned by the technology of the Information Age, lurks in the background as an omnipresent threat to the reins of control customarily applied to the general population. In spite of this uneasy shift to social transparency for the power-elite, China continues to transition from economic oblivion; emerging as a major sphere-of-influence on the international playing field, far exceeding anything they could have envisioned for themselves—this once-remotest of lands– given a national legacy veiled in mystery, spaning five millennia.More
Opinion Poll: Contemporary Art and the Revelation of Meaning
E.H. Gombrich’s, The Story of Art, famously begins with the thought that, “There is really no such thing as Art. There are only artists.” Contemporary art has indeed fulfilled Gombrich’s prescience and insight with a somewhat sorrowful consequence, probably unforeseen when first published in 1950. The past half century has birthed an art in which the conceptual presence of the artist has eclipsed his creation – the work of art. As theory and ideas have become both the driving force of the artist’s creation and the measure against which the viewer evaluates it, the ‘work of art’ has been subject to a draining of its language, i.e.- of its ability to articulate its own reason for being. This deficit of language is now manifest in an excessive reliance on a large infrastructure of ancillary exposition to give voice to these concepts. In this way the work of art has become relegated to a mere illustration of the artist’s thought and unable to dialogue independently of its context.More
Robert Damora- Architect and Photographer: A Life Remembered
November 10, 2008
In this, the last interview Robert Damora gave before his death in March, 2009, I explore his work as an architectural photographer and learn more about his commitment to his craft. Honed by training at Yale and his unfailing attention to the minutest detail, Damora was once described by architect, Walter Gropius as, “the best photographer of architecture in this country.” Here then, is his very personal story, told by Damora himself and by those who cherished him and his remarkable work.
More
Guggenheim Museum Celebrates 50th Anniversary with Kandinsky Retrospective
Clifton Monteith Creates Rustic Art Nouveau Furniture from the Heart
Michigan native and artist, Clifton Monteith, feels at home in Japan, understanding the subtle complexity and silent social consciousness that links custom and culture there. This affection is rooted in his earliest memories of a much-admired Japanese silk embroidery and a Chinese rosewood cradle in his grandparents’ home and in the exercise of his craft, which has been a life-long commitment.
(left: Clifton Monteith with a hand-crafted lantern)
“My work is not about the easiest way of working. It relates to the ancient Shinto concept of spirit being in all things – wind, water, stone, wood. I have grown to believe that consciousness is vested in our work and translates to the experience of others who participate with the work when it is done, whether I know them or not. That my work’s process is slow bothers me not as much as if it were hurried and embodied less consciousness.” – Clifton MonteithMore
Peter G. Ray, Canadian Artist Creates a New Vocabulary of Painting
The persistent autumn rain had turned the streets of lower Manhattan to patent leather, slick and reflecting a maze of city lights, like slender, broken threads of yellow, red and white at my feet. With daily regularity, in late afternoon, Houston Street serves as a busy cross-island artery, draining the living city of its commuter life blood; as an endless stream of cars inches toward the Holland tunnel to the west and the Williamsburg Bridge to the east.
I dodge the gleaming fenders of creeping traffic to find my way to bridgegallery, a Lower East Side destination that has long championed the cause of emerging and established artists, alike. In her narrow studio, brightly-lit against the fading light of day, galleryist and curator, Marilyn Garber, once again offers an evening event, showcasing unique contemporary art. I am there to meet artist, Peter G. Ray (known as G-Ray), Bulgarian by birth, but for many years a Canadian citizen who splits his time between Montreal and New York City.More
Marjorie Strider, Pioneering ’60’s Artist Remains a Creative Force
Like her ooze paintings that were Happenings in the 1970’s – enacted at The Clocktower, where wanton ooze descended a spiral staircase, and at PS1, where orange and red urethane foam swept ladders in their wake and tumbled out of the windows – Marjorie Strider’s canvas works signal emotional release and fusion with their surroundings. In paintings that followed during the 1990’s, Strider delivered, through modeling paste, ceramic and acrylic, the excavated channels into which we shuttle our thoughts and feelings that involuntarily gush out and uncontained, are sent off the canvas edge by her “extensions.” Surface texture consists of hyper-brilliant helixes of concave paint that furrow through a built up terrain of dots, radiant hatch marks, and color amplitudes upon which objects–Egyptian and Buddhist cultural icons as well as roses, skulls, and Madonna are deposited, a detritus of time. More
Phillip Pearlstein Paintings on Exhibit at Lyme Academy College of Art
There are artists who protest too much. And they often find an audience, half-grateful, willing to defer to the presumed authority of their declarations on meaning. This simplifies matters. Or so Philip Pearlstein (b. 1924) would have one think.
His canvases, heaped with images, are offered as meaningless. One might dismiss this as merely disingenuous, and leave it at that. But while the artist may disown his metaphors, the world cannot so easily be stripped of them. Pearlstein’s consistent pairing of objects and naked human bodies is not merely a series inventive, but empty, free associations.
Representation has its price. One does not escape allegory either by edict or by wishing. Myths will have their way, even if – like the neglected witch of Sleeping Beauty – they are not invited. A nude woman in the company of a swan is always Leda, though in one of Pearlstein’s renderings, the fable is made wooden with what might be a shooting gallery target. In another version, now accompanied by a statue of the god Mercury and an accordion, the bestiality becomes comic. In several variants of another ancient story, the sirens are made gigantic by miniature boats.More
Postmodern Architecture Moves Beyond Minimalism to a New Look at the Past
Don’t count on the expected when considering the state of architecture today. A generation of visionaries, trained in a period when minimalism was the dominant theme in architectural design is now in the full flower of their careers and are expanding on and redefining the assumptions of their predecessors in ways that can surprise, delight and challenge the eye.
Mid-20th century America saw a dream for future prosperity being played out in corporate board rooms and on assembly floors of companies that ranked first in the world for innovation and profits. They saw their vision for future prosperity reflected in the glass and chrome buildings that rose to progressively greater heights, like faceless monoliths, in cities around the world. The purity of modernist design, heavily influenced by the German Bauhaus School of Design of the 1920s and 30s, France’s Le Corbusier and the introduction of the International Style, by American, Philip Johnson, and others in 1932, served as a perfect fit for the times.More
Westport Arts Center Creates a Dialogue with Brutalist Architecture
Driving through New York’s scenic Hudson valley on her daily commute to Westport, Connecticut’s Arts Center, Terri Smith, Director of Visual Arts, always finds inspiration in the sinuous rivers and harmonic hills along her route. But, she often noted inharmonious forms rising like rough-honed pillars from the landscape. “My eyes stumbled upon these apparently clumsy, concrete buildings that seemed so incongruous in their natural surroundings,” she told me. “I couldn’t resist the urge to stop, stare, and wonder: “What is happening inside?”
Smith’s shock and curiosity is exactly the reaction that Brutalism provokes–an unexpected surprise and full engagement of the mind. Originally a European architectural movement that began in the 1950’s in response to Modernism’s sleek lines and machine-like precision, Brutalism’s (in French, béton brut, for ‘raw concrete’) run was brief, as it peaked in the early 1970’s.More