In recent years, the Turner Prize for British artists under 50
has been awarded to (among others) Damien Hirst for the pickled
bodies of a cow and calf that have been cut in half, to Chris Ofili
for an image of the Virgin Mary adorned with elephant dung, and to
Grayson Perry, who models human genitalia in pottery while wearing
women’s clothes. “One of my ambitions,” he once said, “is to make
the penis as popular a decorative motif as the flower.” That
achievement, at least, has so far eluded him. To the British, such
artistic high jinks seem for the most part to take place in a
spirit of good fun, and there is a certain amount of self-mockery
on the part of those who have given the Turner Prize the
alternative name of “The Emperor’s New Clothes Prize” — perhaps
out of respect for Joseph Mallord William Turner (1775-1851), after
whom it was named. He, at least, was a real artist.
Those who take it more seriously, however, are not so much the
artists themselves as a group of perpetually enraged and
traditionally minded rebels — if that’s not a contradiction in
terms — calling themselves the “Stuckists,” a name implying that
what they are stuck in is the mud. It was, at any rate, first
applied by Tracey Emin — who didn’t win the Turner Prize when she
entered her unmade bed in the competition in 1999 but became more
famous than most of those who did — to an ex-boyfriend calling
himself Billy Childish who went on to become one of the founders of
the Stuckist movement. He and the other Stuckists eschew
conceptualism and postmodernism for what they call “Remodernism,”
and some might say that their manifesto claim that “artists who
don’t paint aren’t artists” is more shocking than any amount of
elephant dung. Unfortunately, it’s not the sort of shock that makes
your work a media event, the way that that of even the runners-up
among the conceptualists is.
In recent years, however, the Turner has shown signs of turning
away from “weird for the sake of weird” — Moe Szyslak’s definition
of postmodernism on The Simpsons — and back in the
direction of those who can at least recognize the business end of a
paintbrush. And this is a problem for the media, who obviously get
a lot more mileage out of conceptual art than they do out of the
traditional kind that doesn’t lend itself to headline coverage. As
a result, the announcement in May of the short list for this year’s
Turner Prize was accompanied by the following lament from Alastair
Sooke of the Daily Telegraph for the days when
many British artists made brash, splashy and provocative work
that knowingly incited the media, and made for great television.
Newspapers and broadcasters loved reporting their provocations, and
artists loved dreaming up ever more outrageous antics to provide
fodder for newspapers and broadcasters. It was a potent symbiosis.
More recently, however, things have quietened down: last year’s
winner, for instance, was Richard Wright, who makes gentle,
exquisite wall paintings that are a world away from the
headline-grabbing work of the YBAs [Young British Artists] who,
championed by Charles Saatchi, dominated the 1990s. It’s as if
collectively our attitude to contemporary art has mellowed and
matured.
As you can tell from the tone here, Mr. Sooke appears to have
mixed feelings about all this. Art as media event has become so
much what we mean by art these days that it is becoming difficult
for us even to recognize it as art if it doesn’t automatically
provoke outrage and denunciations from those who are, as Tracey
Emin put it, “Stuck, stuck, stuck” with their outdated notions of
art and public propriety. The trouble is that when outrage becomes
predictable it ceases to be outrageous. The latest exhibition at
the Tate Modern, for instance, titled “Exposed: Voyeurism,
Surveillance and the Camera,” which includes images of coitus,
murder, and torture, was respectfully reviewed in the arts pages
but excited little comment otherwise.
“The great triumph of the Turner Prize was that, during the
1990s, it won a large audience for contemporary art in this
country,” wrote Alastair Sooke. “But, now that this battle has been
won, it faces a tricky problem: how can it sustain widespread
interest when it no longer feels appropriate to describe the work
that is short-listed each year as ‘shocking’ or
‘controversial’?”
The problem, in other words, is that art has become — as
politics has lately shown signs of becoming — a mere adjunct of
the celebrity culture and its worship of all that is sensational in
style and vacuous in content and that we no longer know any other
way to look at it.
As it happens, 2010 is also the fiftieth anniversary of Jean-Luc
Godard’s Breathless (`A Bout de Souffle), a
restored print of which was given a showing in New York and Los
Angeles in May and June. Godard’s film did something similar for
the movies, which provided the occasion for this rhapsody from A.
O. Scott in the New York Times:
Even if you were not around to hear, let’s say, the catcalls
greeting Stravinsky’s Rite of Spring, or to unwrap a copy
of James Joyce’s Ulysses smuggled over from Paris in
defiance of the postmaster general, or to examine Marcel Duchamp’s
“Fountain” or Andy Warhol’s Campbell’s soup cans when they were
first exhibited, the works themselves allow you to place yourself
among the brave vanguard who did. And even if you did not see
Breathless during its first run at the dawn of the '60s,
surely every frame carries an afterimage of that heady time, just
as every jazz note and blast of ambient street noise on the
soundtrack brings echoes of an almost mythic moment.
Golly! Of course, if you go back and look at the picture now
without any particular awareness of the context in which it first
appeared you might wonder what all the fuss is about. Jean-Paul
Belmondo plays Michel Poiccard, a small-time thief and mugger who
fantasizes about being Humphrey Bogart. When he is pulled over in a
stolen car, he shoots the motorcycle cop with a gun he finds in the
glove compartment. He appears to have no particular feelings about
this, but we see him being hunted down by the Parisian police while
he attempts to romance Patricia Franchini, an American
gamine played by Jean Seberg, who has journalistic
ambitions. In the end, after sleeping with him, she betrays him to
the police and watches as he is gunned down in the street. Once
again, neither of them appears to have much in the way of feelings,
either about the sex or the killing.
Michel’s dreams of escape to Rome with Patricia and a satchel
full of money become just another of his fantasies, like that of
Bogartian cool, and do not rise to the level of genuine aspiration
even when they seem about to be realized. The film, with its
celebrated jump cuts and jazz score and commitment to emotional
“cool,” is not just all style and no substance but intended to be
so. This is precisely what people like Mr. Scott like about it.
David Thomson, writing in the New Republic, is a little
less giddy with excitement, acknowledging that “the really fresh
thing about Breathless wasn’t that it cried out, ‘Look, a
brave new cinema made by young people, full of life and invention.’
No, it was a warning. It said (even in 1960), ‘Watch out, this
game, this entertainment is over. Movie is all used up, and if we
repeat it it will turn camp.’ ” Of course it turned camp — or
postmodern, which is the son of camp — anyway, even if we didn’t
repeat it. That’s the only reason we are still allowed to watch
Turner Classic Movies or American Movie Classics on cable.
Still, Mr. Thomson’s view seems a little excessive. If, as he
says, Breathless “was one of the clearest statements to
date (in 1960) that classical film was dead and over,” and that “we
have really gone no further in our funeral observations in 50
years,” it seems a little odd that five of his own favorite films
“of all time” as chosen for Sight and Sound in 2002 were
made after 1960. If, indeed, “classical film” was “dead and over,”
its death seems to have had no more resonance or significance than
Mr. Belmondo’s in the movie. I think what he means is that it was a
sort of ritual death: one which must now be continually reenacted,
like that of youthful rebellion that I discussed in this space last
month (see “Rebels Without a Clue,” TAS, June 2010) — and
for the same reason, which is to recapture what Mr. Scott calls the
“mythic moment” of the revolutionary overthrow of the bourgeois
order in which style took a back seat to substance. We have to keep
reminding ourselves of the potency of this myth lest we forget and
find ourselves growing nostalgic for content and meaning. Maybe
that’s what’s happening with the Turner Prize. I hope so, but I
wouldn’t bet on it.