Monday, December 21, 2009

Man Ray,African Art and the Modernist Lens, at The Phillips Collection, Washington D. C.

I’m not sure that I understood this exhibition. The museum literature states that it explores the role of photography in shaping an understanding of African Art in the early 20th Century and documents its influence on modernism, the Harlem Renaissance, surrealism, high fashion and popular culture. It suggests that photography played a role equal to that of modern painting. It is a very substantial exhibition taking up four or five galleries and for the most part shows us photographs made of African objects as well as some twenty of the objects that were photographed.

I think it goes without saying that if there is a new cultural influence in Paris, the fashion capital of the world, it will make its way to the general public through newspapers and magazines from that city as well as through other popular cultural outlets. I agree that photography plays a large part in the transmission of that impulse.But, contrary to the claim made here, that influence has no where near the same impact as African Art had on painting wherein Picasso’s Les Demoiselles D’Avingon lead to cubism and the reconceptualization of picture space and the subsequent explosion of modern art. Even photo collage, of which there are no examples here, could have been shown as an indicator of influence, but of course photo collage comes directly from cubism, painting.

I am confused as well because the name Man Ray appears above the title. In the exhibition only 50 of the 100 photographs are his. Other photographers represented are Alfred Stieglitz, Cecil Beaton, Raoul Ubac, Walker Evans, et al. The Evans photographs were made for the 1935 exhibition catalogue of African Art at MOMA, the Stieglitz photographs were made, I would think as a record, of the exhibition at his Gallery 291 in 1918, Beaton’s work of course had to do with fashion, and so on. Many of Man Ray’s photographs were made for a book written by an anthropologist but because they were artistic interpretation rather than documentary or illustration, they were not used. How unused photographs can be said to be influential is beyond my comprehension, nor did the museum explain that they had been exhibited elsewhere.

Walker Evans photographs are straight forward documentary and they are excellent prints with good composition and a full range of tonal values that illustrate the objects very nicely. They look to have been made with a medium format camera, likely a four by five that he had just begun to use at that time. One question these raised that was not answered was how these prints made for MOMA came to be the property now of The Smithsonian. I was curious if extra prints had been made for sale in addition to the MOMA prints, and if they were widely circulated, which would attest to their cultural influence, or, if they had not, if MOMA had passed them on to someone else before they made their way to Washington. Evans archives are at the Metropolitan Museum in New York. I am also curious if the Met has these negatives or a set of their own prints. But all that is beyond the scope of the exhibition. Sorry to have digressed.

What is immediately evident in this exhibition is that the objects themselves are far more interesting than the photographs regardless of who took them. Each one of them is an object exuding expressive form and with wonderful color and texture and bursting with symbolic experience expressing profound feelings. The implied comparison here could almost convince you that photography is not a fine art form after all.

As with every situation there is one exception to this observation and that is a photograph made by Walker Evans of an eight inch oval mask. This is so primarily, I think, because in the photograph the mask is tipped to one side and the eyes seems to be looking down with a sense of deep longing, whereas the mask on the pedestal is upright and stares straight ahead with a blank mindlessness: Evans’ photograph has imbued it with spirit,.

The outstanding Man Ray photo is his well known Noir et Blanche in which the black mask stands upright on the right and a woman with a made up white face rests her head on the table top. The oval of her head is a direct copy of the well known Brancusi work. Two different prints of this work are shown as well as a sketch he made before the picture was taken, two others with different cropping, and, finally, a copy of the magazine in which it appeared in yet a different cropping.

Included among the Ray works was one of his Rayograms, a photogram which made use of one of the items. I thought it a not very interesting work. It was of interest to me only because I have just read Moholy Nagy’ book, the New Vision, and he writes at length about photograms. I suspect that I won’t be trying to make any.

I was pleased to see here an early Lois Mailou Jones painting, from the Phillips Collection, which shows her working in a style that is African cum Picasso. I saw a career retrospective of her work in Philadelphia last year and it is always nice to see more of her work in other venues. (I have a hunch I saw this same painting in that exhibition.) Like Picasso Ms Jones was influenced by and worked in a number of styles. Unfortunately, unlike Picasso, she never made any of those styles her own; without exception they are all derivative. That’s too bad because her drawing was excellent and she had mastered the craft of painting. At one time she did fabric design for a firm in Boston, those florid forties floral prints used for draperies and upholstery. Apparently she was very successful at that but gave it up to be a fine artist. I’m sorry she didn’t achieve a voice of her own …her work is always well executed, just not interesting.

Again my comments are beside the point here …my mind wanders …but it was that kind of exhibition. It was interesting but not much beyond that. I can add that the lighting on the photographs was good …there were few reflections in the glass.

http://www.phillipscollection.org/exhibitions/current/index.aspx

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