The following essay by Stephen R.
C. Hicks is the introduction to the Newberry Manifesto.
Post-Postmodern Art
Art begins in the mind of a
creative individual. The artist takes his significant
experiences and thoughts as raw material and creates a
perceptual embodiment for them. Each artist makes
independent judgments about which of his experiences and
thoughts are significant. And to the best of his ability and
with his unique style, each artist employs the techniques of
his perceptual medium of choice. The result is an object
that, at its best, has an awesome power to exalt the senses,
the intellects, and the passions of those who experience it.
Those individuals who over the
centuries accepted art's calling developed it into a vehicle
that called upon the highest insights of the human creative
vision and demanded exacting skill. The names that evoke in
us a sense of greatness - Leonardo, Michelangelo, Raphael,
Rembrandt, Vermeer - stand for those individuals who
expanded the range of themes and subjects and developed the
repertoire of techniques available to the next generation of
artists. Their achievements created the status of the artist
as not merely a visionary or a craftsman, but as a special
individual in whom both vision and craft are integrated and
heightened.
But by about the middle of the
nineteenth century, the art world began to lose its
confidence. The art world's symptoms of decline were part of
the broader intellectual world's slipping into a sense that
progress, beauty, optimism, and genuine originality were no
longer possible.
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"The artist is not an archaeologist,
and the point is not to resurrect and imitate the past. The
point is that the world they saw and a whole lot more is
still out there." |
The causes of the sense of decline
were many. The increasing naturalism of the nineteenth
century led, for those who had not shaken off their
religious heritage, to a feeling of being alone and without
guidance in a vast, empty universe. The rise of
philosophical theories of skepticism and irrationalism led
many to distrust their cognitive faculties of perception and
reason. The development of scientific theories such as
evolution and entropy brought with them pessimistic accounts
of human nature and the destiny of the world. The spread of
liberalism and free markets caused their opponents on the
political left, many of whom were members of the artistic
avant garde, to see political developments as a series
of deep disappointments. And the technological revolutions
spurred by the combination of science and capitalism led
many to project a future in which mankind would be
dehumanized or destroyed by the very machines that were
supposed to improve their lot.
By the turn of the twentieth
century, the nineteenth-century intellectual world's sense
of disquiet had become a full-blown anxiety. The artists
responded, exploring in their works the implications of a
world in which reason, order, certainty, dignity, and
optimism seemed to have disappeared.
The works that are the iconic
pieces of twentieth century art express the minds of the
great names that created them.
Twentieth-century art is Pablo
Picasso's fractured world populated by vacant-eyed,
disjointed beings. It is Edward Hopper's emotionally
out-of-tune men and women in bland, worn settings. It is the
predatory horror of Willem de Kooning's Woman series.
It is Salvador Dali's surreal world in which the distinction
between subjective dream states and objective reality is
obliterated. It is Andy Warhol's smirking trivialization and
mechanical reproductions. It is a reality that is captured
presciently in Edvard Munch's The Scream, the horror
of being a cypher in a world of hideously swirling
near-formless forms.
The twentieth-century world is also
the story of its own self-elimination. While Picasso and
Munch looked at reality and reported their depressed
observations, others retreated from the world and proceeded
to strip away from art anything that they could. On the
grounds that other media such as photography and literature
reproduced reality and told stories, many eliminated as much
content as they could from their works. Art came to be a
self-contained study of dimension, color, and composition.
But the reductionist, stripping-away game led quickly to
challenges even to those features. In the sterile color
studies of Piet Mondrian and Barnett Newman, any sense of a
third dimension disappeared. In Kasimir Malevich's
near-monochrome White on White, color differentiation
was abandoned. And with Jackson Pollock's erratic paint
drips and splatters, any role of artistic composition was
eliminated.
The art world had reached a dead
end. When it looked out at the world through the eyes of
Picasso and Munch, it saw nothing of value. When it looked
at what the reductionists had produced, it saw that nothing
uniquely artistic had survived. Collectively, the leading
members of the art world had decided that art has no
content, that it has no special media or techniques, and
that the artist has no crucial role in the process. Art
became nothing - or a statement of nothingness.
The summary conclusion was
announced, infamously, by Marcel Duchamp.
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Asked to submit something for
display in 1917, Duchamp sent a urinal. Duchamp of course
knew the history of art. He knew what had been achieved -
how over the centuries art had been a powerful vehicle that
called upon the highest development of the human creative
vision and demanded exacting technical skill; and he knew
that art had an awesome power to exalt the senses, the
minds, and the passions of those who experience it. Duchamp
reflected on the history of art and decided to make a
statement. The artist is not a great creator - Duchamp went
shopping at a plumbing store. The artwork is not a special
object - it was mass-produced in a factory. The experience
of art is not exciting and ennobling - at best it is
puzzling and mostly leaves one with a sense of distaste. But
over and above that, Duchamp did not select just any
ready-made object to display. In selecting the urinal, his
message was clear: Art is something you piss on.
Art by its nature is about the
significant. To the extent that art is an expression of the
artist's being, it expresses what the artist thinks and
feels to be significant. To the extent that art is an act of
communication, it is a statement to an audience of what the
artist thinks and feels to be important. When an artist
decides to devote a week, a month, or a year or more of his
life to creating This rather than That - he is
saying that This is worth his time and effort. When
the artist presents the results of his efforts to an
audience, he is telling them that his creation is worthy of
the time and effort of their contemplation. We do not waste
our time on the insignificant or ask others to waste theirs
- unless we wish to express the significant belief that
nothing is significant.
Duchamp and the others have become
the iconic figures of recent art history. Through them, the
story of the art world is a story of self-conscious
disintegration.
Once, however, everything has been
disintegrated, every artist has a choice. He can choose to
play the current game of cynicism and despair, hoping, at
best, to introduce a minor variation here and there. Or he
can look afresh at the world and rediscover in it the
potential that earlier great artists pointed us toward.
Much of the art world is currently
a long way from building upon Michelangelo's powerfully
stylized human forms, Rembrandt's skill of characterization,
Vermeer's exquisite use of light. Though closer in time,
much of it is also a long way from the majesty in the works
of Albert Bierstadt and Frederick Church, the elegance of
John Singer Sargent's paintings or the exuberance of
Frederic Remington's.
The artist is not an archaeologist,
and the point is not to resurrect and imitate the past. The
point is that the world they saw and a whole lot more is
still out there.
The artist, like every thinking and
passionate human being, has the power to decide whether to
accept the assumptions of the recent past and work within
them, or whether to strike out on his own, questioning those
assumptions and actively seeking alternatives to them. Every
artist, in his work, expresses the deepest choices he has
made. That power of expression is what compels some of us to
be artists in the best sense, and it is what attracts those
of us who are not artists to their creations. The strategic
choice of what to express and how, accordingly, is
everything.
Stephen R. C. Hicks
Associate Professor of Philosophy
Chairman, Department of Philosophy
Director, Honors Program in Liberal Arts
Rockford College
Postscript
Artistic revolutions are made by a
few key individuals. At the heart of every revolution is an
artist who achieves originality. A novel theme, a fresh
subject, or the inventive use of composition, figure, or
color marks the beginning of new era.
Yet for that artist's achievement
to reach the rest of the world, others play a crucial role.
Collectors, gallery owners, curators, and critics make
decisions about which artists are genuinely creating - and,
accordingly, about which artists are most deserving of their
money, gallery space, and recommendations. Those individuals
also make the revolutions. In the broader art world, a
revolution depends on those who are capable of recognizing
the original artist's achievement and who have the
entrepreneurial courage to promote his work.
To all such individuals, I
recommend Michael Newberry's
work. The following pages
should reveal to you a new force in the art world.
Newberry's paintings are the work of a strikingly original
artist. His accompanying
manifesto
expresses the principles
that animate his being and his paintings - and it expresses
them with just the right touch of brazen self-confidence.
Newberry's work speaks to the
senses, the intellect, and the passions of those who do not
need the judgment of history to tell them what is great, but
who can themselves make the judgment of history today.
S. R. C. H.