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Bravery beyond the call of duty: the men who dared to say boo to Picasso
The Spectator (UK) ^ | 06/01/2002 | Frank Johnson

Posted on 05/30/2002 6:03:51 PM PDT by dighton

A majority of art critics plus received opinion — two not entirely separate groups — have declared Picasso the winner in the Tate Modern match against Matisse. No wonder; bad things have happened to people who have questioned the greatness of Picasso, such as the neo-romantic painter, sculptor and champion of English art Michael Ayrton (1921–75), once this magazine’s art critic.

In the mid-1940s, he indulged in just such a questioning; first in a radio talk, later in Penguin New Writing in an article called ‘A Master of Pastiche (a personal reaction to Picasso)’. It began:

To write anything but praise, or to attempt anything but a favourable analysis of the present value and future significance of the art of Picasso, is to be attacked at once. I have taken this risk on several occasions and have been variously accused of personal jealousy, fifth-column activity and high treason. I have also been taken to task for changing my spots in midstream, to coin a mixed metaphor in the manner of the master’s own painting....

A deft touch, that last phrase — considering the assorted newspaper cuttings, etc. to be found mixed together in some of the master’s great works. With sublime courage, Ayrton pressed on towards almost certain annihilation. He positioned a defence on his flank: ‘I have never denied his genius.’ But then he plunged to his doom:

I suggest, however, that changing the course of European art does not ipso facto improve that course.... Such men as Hitler have changed the course of human history to the disadvantage of mankind, and I believe that Picasso, taking all into account, has been of very negative service to art in his changing of its course.

But the one accusation I find hard to take is that of not understanding Picasso. Heavens alive, his work is not difficult to understand. If it was really obscure, if it really required long and concentrated study, Picasso would not be the richest and most famous artist alive.

That did it! To compare Picasso to Hitler was one thing. But to suggest that Picasso was not difficult, did not require long and concentrated study! Ayrton was now a marked man. The reader of his brilliant article senses that, by this stage, there can be no turning back, and the author might as well abandon all concern for his personal safety.

He suggests that ‘nothing could be simpler’ than Picasso’s process:

He is not concerned with nature, nor with a single tradition, and in this he differs from artists of the past, as Woolworth’s differs from the craftsman’s shop. What he does is to engulf an existing formula, choosing, it seems, at random from the history of his art. It may be negro sculpture, Greek vase painting, or the drawings of Ingres. This formula, once digested, he regurgitates, like the albatross feeding her young, accentuating certain characteristics and obliterating others. Having exhausted one formula he turns to another, possibly maintaining part of the first ...the classic Graeco-Roman head, for instance, establishes a comfortable association of ideas which prepares him [the viewer] for whatever apparently outrageous exaggeration Picasso may see fit to use to enliven his picture.

Later, Ayrton observes:

The dilettanti of today who are so foolishly quick to despise a legitimate influence present in a young artist’s work are prepared to swallow with delight the painting of Picasso whose derivations have been so blatant for 40 years. Originality is in itself an exceedingly unimportant aspect of art ...it has only achieved a spurious importance during the 20th century, the very times which have been dominated by Picasso himself.

Ayrton’s biographer, Justine Hopkins, writes of the ‘storm’ that the original broadcast produced. Ayrton had often dined with ‘the great patron and connoisseur of the London art world, Peter Watson’, who found it ‘not merely unacceptable but offensive’. Ayrton’s diaries contained no more than the entry: ‘PW — dinner.’ Graham Sutherland wrote a ‘stinging letter’ against Ayrton to the Listener.

Ayrton had long worried that he might be remembered more as a critic than as a painter. Miss Hopkins says that the Picasso affair was ‘the conclusive factor’ in his resignation in 1946 as The Spectator’s art reviewer. Ayrton was ‘distressed by the damage undoubtedly caused by the Picasso incident, writing ruefully to a friend in April that “as you know I am not exactly popular with the established reputations among writers on art and am indeed on terms of abuse with most of them”....’

A few pockets of British resistance to Picasso remained. Unfortunately, one of them was Sir John Rothenstein, the Tate’s director; nowhere near as brilliant a figure as Ayrton — actually, not brilliant at all. He was the central figure of the ‘Tate Affair’ of the early 1950s. Even at that late date, the brave but undistinguished Rothenstein held out against more modernists — which meant more Picassos — in the collection. Or so his enemies claimed. Picasso’s friend and biographer John Richardson — companion of the brilliantly malicious connoisseur Douglas Cooper — tells the story in his wonderfully readable memoir: The Sorcerer’s Apprentice: Picasso, Provence and Douglas Cooper.

Cooper was part of a modernist plot to have Rothenstein sacked. Mr Richardson rather implies that the plotters were in the minority against the fuddy-duddies. But students of the avant-garde v. the Establishment would doubt that.

In 1954 a drunken Cooper spotted Rothenstein at an exhibition. He shouted at Rothenstein, ‘That’s the little man who is going to lose his job.’ Rothenstein physically attacked him, telling reporters that his right hook left Cooper crawling on the floor.

To that claim, Richardson reacts, all these years later, in his book of 1999, as a Manchester United supporter would to the suggestion that his mate succumbed to a Liverpudlian blow. ‘Bunkum. All Rothenstein managed to do was knock off his opponent’s glasses. Since Douglas was taller and heavier, he had no problem holding off his attacker, laughing as Rothenstein’s little arms flailed ineffectively.... Both contestants claimed to have behaved heroically.’

Rothenstein claimed to have received a letter of congratulation from a painter he greatly admired. The painter’s identity was one of the reasons why the sophisticated questioned his taste. It was the then Prime Minister, Churchill. Cooper told the press that he had received a congratulatory telephone call from Picasso.

Despite that complete ascendancy these last 50 years and more, I suspect that it is still brave to dissent. Readers will go to Picasso–Matisse and judge for themselves the former’s minor genius — which phrase is quite brave enough for me.

© 2002 The Spectator.co.uk


TOPICS: Culture/Society; United Kingdom
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To: Paul Atreides
Modernism is like liberalism; two of the biggest scams foisted on the world. I took a course on Modern Art and it and liberalism go hand-in-hand.

You make an interesting point.

Conservatives will tell you that there are absolutes in the world: is means is , for instance.

Liberals like to change the rules as they go, so that they never have to take responsibility for anything.

"Modern art" plays on the liberal insecurities and lack of absolutes perfectly.

I've made my living as a designer and artist, and frankly, I have no use for 'modern art'.

21 posted on 05/30/2002 8:36:52 PM PDT by IncPen
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To: elbucko
Sure, I like the Spitfire also.
22 posted on 05/30/2002 8:38:17 PM PDT by Sam Cree
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To: dighton
Picasso was extremely talented and powerful. But much of his later work is cruel and brutal. In particular, he is noticeably brutal toward the women he paints. Some terms that come to mind are deconstruction, rape, and debasement. So the question is, can a painter be great if he is technically sophisticated and emotionally powerful but morally debased?

I don't think so, but then I'm in the minority on this one.

23 posted on 05/30/2002 9:02:16 PM PDT by Cicero
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To: Cicero
An Orwell essay addresses your question:
... the worst crimes are not always the punishable ones. By encouraging necrophilic reveries one probably does quite as much harm as by, say, picking pockets at the races. One ought to be able to hold in one’s head simultaneously the two facts that Dali is a good draughtsman and a disgusting human being. The one does not invalidate or, in a sense, affect the other. The first thing that we demand of a wall is that it shall stand up. If it stands up, it is a good wall, and the question of what purpose it serves is separable from that. And yet even the best wall in the world deserves to be pulled down if it surrounds a concentration camp. In the same way it should be possible to say, “This is a good book or a good picture, and it ought to be burned by the public hangman.” Unless one can say that, at least in imagination, one is shirking the implications of the fact that an artist is also a citizen and a human being.

-- Benefit of Clergy: Some Notes on Salvador Dali.


24 posted on 05/30/2002 9:30:40 PM PDT by dighton
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To: Sam Cree
EMD E-8 locomotive, designed in the 1930's plus many appliances and furniture from the 1950's.

Pfui!

The Alco PA-1 in Santa Fe Red Warbonnet.

+=<)B^)

25 posted on 05/30/2002 11:53:40 PM PDT by Erasmus
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To: dighton
Pablo: "Es guano in Majorca."

Pedro: "Pablo, Picasso!"

26 posted on 05/30/2002 11:57:38 PM PDT by Erasmus
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To: Erasmus
"The Alco PA-1 in Santa Fe Red Warbonnet."

I like that one also, though I still prefer the E series for beauty. I guess the environment leftwingers would have fits about the way the Alcos smoked, which gives those locomotives an endearing quality.

It is sad that Alco is gone, I've never liked the EMD GP series too much.

I was riding Amtrak a year or so ago, when I looked ahead (on a curve) at the Genesis engine pulling us out of a station, I was startled to actually see flames coming out of her stacks (in daytime). Of course, not too many years ago, when airliners used piston engine planes, they all showed flames from their stacks at night.

27 posted on 05/31/2002 5:44:39 AM PDT by Sam Cree
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To: IronJack; IncPen
In the course on Modern Art I took, it was explained that what made modern art so significant was what the artist was "feeling" at the time he painted, or sculpted, the work. In other words, an artist can do a bunch of squiggles on a canvas and, because he was thinking about his opposition to the war on terrorism at the time, he can give it some sort of pretentious title about being anti-war and he is hailed as a genius.
28 posted on 05/31/2002 7:22:27 AM PDT by Paul Atreides
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To: Cato the Censor
Picasso's early years were awesome. Then he went insane.
29 posted on 05/31/2002 7:54:05 AM PDT by Eagle Eye
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To: Skooz
Jonathan Richman bump!
30 posted on 05/31/2002 7:56:05 AM PDT by GodBlessRonaldReagan
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To: elbucko
I admire the Spit on purely artistic grounds

Gee, I wonder why...

31 posted on 05/31/2002 9:30:16 AM PDT by ArrogantBustard
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To: ArrogantBustard
I like Norman Rockwell. To me, that is art with a message that everyone can understand.
32 posted on 05/31/2002 9:38:46 AM PDT by 7thson
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To: Sam Cree
" There is other modern(e) art that I admire also, the EMD E-8 locomotive, designed in the 1930's plus many appliances and furniture from the 1950's. "

Excuse me, but that is NOT art- it's Industrial Design!

SoCal Pubbie, member IDSA.

33 posted on 05/31/2002 9:45:33 AM PDT by SoCal Pubbie
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To: 7thson
I like Norman Rockwell.

Nothing wrong with Norman Rockwell. I love the artistry in a well designed machine or structure.

Anybody recognise that one (without peeking)?

AB

34 posted on 05/31/2002 9:48:46 AM PDT by ArrogantBustard
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To: SoCal Pubbie
"Excuse me, but that is NOT art- it's Industrial Design!"

Well, I guess you're right, it's not "fine art" like Picasso did. Still, it's art IMHO. But don't Industrial designers still often have an eye for beauty? (I know, these days, beauty and art are incidental). I know architects do, architecture is often considered to be fine art, though it strikes me as closer to industrial design.

BTW, my son is considering law school in San Diego, a long ways from our home in FL. What do you think of the area?

35 posted on 05/31/2002 11:03:59 AM PDT by Sam Cree
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To: Sam Cree
I was only half serious. Few people know what industrial design is, even though every product is shaped by it! Design is indeed artistic, but at it's best it falls between art and engineering.

San Diego is a great place. What school, Western State?

36 posted on 05/31/2002 1:33:27 PM PDT by SoCal Pubbie
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To: SoCal Pubbie
"I was only half serious"

Yes, me too. U of San Diego, does that sound right?

37 posted on 05/31/2002 2:01:58 PM PDT by Sam Cree
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To: Carolina
I agree whole-heartedly. Picasso's non-modernist stuff is exquisite - in Japan (Hakone, to be precise) I saw a pencil drawing of a human hand that rivalled Da Vinci, and a set of plates on which he'd painted bullfighting scenes that seemed to explode off the wall. He may have been a salesman and even a bit of a con artist in later life, but the boy could actually employ various media to communicate beauty, and that's my working definition of "art." Too many "artists" these days cannot draw a table lamp, but Picasso wasn't one of them.
38 posted on 05/31/2002 2:23:05 PM PDT by Billthedrill
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To: IronJack
Don't get me started on Truman Captoe

While his personal life was a bit out of the ordinary, some of his writing was wonderful!

39 posted on 05/31/2002 2:26:39 PM PDT by ladyjane
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To: livius
Thanks for mentioning that Picasso was a skilled painter first who did the highly stylized works later. Dali another. Excellent draftsmen.
40 posted on 05/31/2002 2:27:38 PM PDT by RightWhale
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