Video: Wise words from critic Robert Hughes.
Hughes is my favorite art critic. Direct, articulate and profound.
Quotes
Quotes: An Insider’s Perspective
“Liberal: a power worshipper without power.”
-George Orwell
Orwell fascinates me. A leftist himself, he nevertheless accurately depicted the abuses and manipulations the left utilizes to consolidate power. 1984 and Animal Farm are frighteningly accurate depictions of the current culture, the results of the long march through the institutions.
The Stuckist Manifesto
Long but worthwhile-the original statement about the Stuckism by Billy Childish and Charles Thomson. They later decided Stuckism was just a facet of the larger art world reformation of Remodernism. These two principled men were able to critique the folly the art world has become, while at the same time launching not one but two open source art movements that are destined to finally bury the rotting corpse of Post Modernism. I am grateful for their wisdom and generosity. -Richard Bledsoe
THE STUCKISTS
(est. 1999)
“Your paintings are stuck,
you are stuck!
Stuck! Stuck! Stuck!”
Tracey Emin
Against conceptualism, hedonism and the cult of the ego–artist.
1. Stuckism is the quest for authenticity. By removing the mask of cleverness and admitting where we are, the Stuckist allows him/herself uncensored expression.
2. Painting is the medium of self–discovery. It engages the person fully with a process of action, emotion, thought and vision, revealing all of these with intimate and unforgiving breadth and detail.
3. Stuckism proposes a model of art which is holistic. It is a meeting of the conscious and unconscious, thought and emotion, spiritual and material, private and public. Modernism is a school of fragmentation — one aspect of art is isolated and exaggerated to detriment of the whole. This is a fundamental distortion of the human experience and perpetrates an egocentric lie.
4. Artists who don’t paint aren’t artists.
5. Art that has to be in a gallery to be art isn’t art.
6. The Stuckist paints pictures because painting pictures is what matters.
7. The Stuckist is not mesmerised by the glittering prizes, but is wholeheartedly engaged in the process of painting. Success to the Stuckist is to get out of bed in the morning and paint.
8. It is the Stuckist’s duty to explore his/her neurosis and innocence through the making of paintings and displaying them in public, thereby enriching society by giving shared form to individual experience and an individual form to shared experience.
9. The Stuckist is not a career artist but rather an amateur (amare, Latin, to love) who takes risks on the canvas rather than hiding behind ready–made objects (e.g. a dead sheep). The amateur, far from being second to the professional, is at the forefront of experimentation, unencumbered by the need to be seen as infallible. Leaps of human endeavour are made by the intrepid individual, because he/she does not have to protect their status. Unlike the professional, the Stuckist is not afraid to fail.
10. Painting is mysterious. It creates worlds within worlds, giving access to the unseen psychological realities that we inhabit. The results are radically different from the materials employed. An existing object (e.g. a dead sheep) blocks access to the inner world and can only remain part of the physical world it inhabits, be it moorland or gallery. Ready–made art is a polemic of materialism.
11. Post Modernism, in its adolescent attempt to ape the clever and witty in modern art, has shown itself to be lost in a cul–de–sac of idiocy. What was once a searching and provocative process (as Dadaism) has given way to trite cleverness for commercial exploitation. The Stuckist calls for an art that is alive with all aspects of human experience; dares to communicate its ideas in primeval pigment; and possibly experiences itself as not at all clever!
12. Against the jingoism of Brit Art and the ego–artist. Stuckism is an international non–movement.
13. Stuckism is anti ‘ism’. Stuckism doesn’t become an ‘ism’ because Stuckism is not Stuckism, it is stuck!
14. Brit Art, in being sponsored by Saachis, main stream conservatism and the Labour government, makes a mockery of its claim to be subversive or avant–garde.
15. The ego–artist’s constant striving for public recognition results in a constant fear of failure. The Stuckist risks failure wilfully and mindfully by daring to transmute his/her ideas through the realms of painting. Whereas the ego–artist’s fear of failure inevitably brings about an underlying self–loathing, the failures that the Stuckist encounters engage him/her in a deepening process which leads to the understanding of the futility of all striving. The Stuckist doesn’t strive — which is to avoid who and where you are — the Stuckist engages with the moment.
16. The Stuckist gives up the laborious task of playing games of novelty, shock and gimmick. The Stuckist neither looks backwards nor forwards but is engaged with the study of the human condition. The Stuckists champion process over cleverness, realism over abstraction, content over void, humour over wittiness and painting over smugness.
17. If it is the conceptualist’s wish to always be clever, then it is the Stuckist’s duty to always be wrong.
18. The Stuckist is opposed to the sterility of the white wall gallery system and calls for exhibitions to be held in homes and musty museums, with access to sofas, tables, chairs and cups of tea. The surroundings in which art is experienced (rather than viewed) should not be artificial and vacuous.
19. Crimes of education: instead of promoting the advancement of personal expression through appropriate art processes and thereby enriching society, the art school system has become a slick bureaucracy, whose primary motivation is financial. The Stuckists call for an open policy of admission to all art schools based on the individual’s work regardless of his/her academic record, or so–called lack of it.
We further call for the policy of entrapping rich and untalented students from at home and abroad to be halted forthwith.
We also demand that all college buildings be available for adult education and recreational use of the indigenous population of the respective catchment area. If a school or college is unable to offer benefits to the community it is guesting in, then it has no right to be tolerated.
20. Stuckism embraces all that it denounces. We only denounce that which stops at the starting point — Stuckism starts at the stopping point!
Billy Childish
Charles Thomson
4.8.99
The following have been proposed to the Bureau of Inquiry for possible inclusion as Honorary Stuckists:
Katsushika Hokusai
Utagawa Hiroshige
Vincent van Gogh
Edvard Munch
Karl Schmidt–Rotluff
Max Beckman
Kurt Schwitters
Quotes: The Means of Knowledge
“Let us dare to read, think, speak and write.”
-John Adams
To which I would add: let us dare to paint.
Establishment “Art” : The Bricks Controversy of 1976
The Case For Optimism
“Don’t wait for inspiration. It comes while one is working.”
-Henri Matisse
So while this blog will be an ongoing confrontation with the forces of evil, I realize an endless presentation of complaint and attack would be tiresome. It also does not reflect the positive vision I have of this life.
The world is full of joy, and the Lord has put us here to have life more abundantly. I relish the work that I’m doing-the painting, the writing, the sense that I can make a difference in this time of need-and that many others are also rising to the challenges that our society is facing.
Our brave founding fathers put everything they had on the line to create a new way of existence on this planet. Their ideas, while immanently practical, also contained true hope and faith in individual potential. Now it’s our turn to make sure America, the greatest of human endeavors, survives for future generations to experience.
Still so much to be done! It’s all so exciting.
Quotes: Fashionable Art
“The function of fashionable art is to give fashionable people a painless simulation of culture.”
-Billy Childish and Charles Thomson
Founders of Stuckism/Remodernism
Quotes: Networking
“It’s very true that an artist who networks well will have better opportunities than one who doesn’t network well. But great networking skills without great art won’t change art history.”
-Mark Kostabi
Remodernism does not accept the current philosophy so prevalent in the art world-that who you know is more important than what you do. The establishment has been pushing art that does not rely on skill or vision, because that allows them to favor cronies whose work does not have artistic merit. To join in this dynamic, the only talent that matters is the art of sucking up. Short term success, at best. Artists should understand their role in the mighty continuum of art, and make works that aim for the ages, instead of trying to be in sync with fashionable trends. If our scene is to improve, our artists need to be themselves, working obsessively at their unique visions.
Quotes: Words to Live By
“I must create a system or be enslaved by another mans…”
-William Blake
Blake lived by these words, supremely confident in the truth of his vision. He endured obscurity during his lifetime. His now priceless illuminated books sat gathering dust for decades, displayed at the counter of his grubby print shop; Available for a pittance, and still never bought.
Blake never gave up. He always believed his work to be divinely inspired, meant for a mass audience. History has proved he was correct.
Commentary: Art and The Bafflement of the Public
“The history of modern art is also the history of the progressive loss of art’s audience. Art has increasingly become the concern of the artist and the bafflement of the public.” – Henry Geldzahler
Accurate summation by a notable curator, historian, and critic. As artists we have become guilty by association with masses of meaningless dreck being passed off as art. The audience is baffled because they intuitively recognize art has gone wrong. It’s time to stop all the relativism-the mushy morass of subjectivity that is used like a weapon against quality.
There is Truth, there is Beauty, there is Excellence. Artists above all need to commit to higher standards for themselves and the works their peers. Remodernism is about leaving behind the lax sensibilites of Establishment Art, and making a stand for principles.