Rants and reactions to contemporary politics, art and culture.
Tuesday, July 11, 2017
Paris Journal: "Picasso Primitif" at Le musee du quai Branly
Picasso (Sans Titre, l967), photograph by Hallie Cohen
As well as being an artist, Picasso collected “primitive
art” from l900 right up until his death in l973. “I have felt my strongest
artistic emotions, when suddenly confronted with the sublime beauty of
sculpture executed by anonymous artists of Africa,” Picasso communicated in one
letter. “These works of a religious, passionate and rigorously logical art are
the most powerful and most beautiful things the human imagination has ever
produced.” And here is his wifeFrancoise Gilot quoting him from Vivre
Avec Picasso, “Quand J’ai decovert l’art negre, il y a quarante ans et
que j’ai peint ce qu’on appelle mon Epoche negre.” What would the folks who
pilloried DanaSchutz for her Emmet Till painting at the Whitney have thought about the current “Picasso Primitif” show
at Le musee du quai Branly in Paris? Primitive is actually a derogatory term and one that's often used by western art historians. Remember Edward Said's Orientalism? The show is loaded with citations, one
potentially more inflammatory than the next, to those who look at such appropriation as a form
of cultural imperialism. Take for instance the essay by the dealer Henry
Kahnweiler, “L’art negre at le cubism.” It’s an innocent enough title. However, the
notion that the perspectival innocence of so called indigenous or "primitive" peoples (here designated by their African origins) could spearhead a
modernist movement sounds a little like those l930’s British films where Oxbridge archeologists raid Egyptian tombs, only to face the wrath of angry empresses who return from the dead. By the way there's a whole
section dealing with the influence of primitive art on
Picasso’s depiction of sexuality which should trigger not only multiculturalists, but feminists
too.
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