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Monday, January 13, 2014
Clawing your way out -- or in
I've been reading a book by Glenn Adamson, "Thinking Through Craft," in which he grapples with the question of the difference, if any, between art and craft. Unfortunately, there is a difference, at least in the minds of the High Art world. Craft is somehow not only different from but inferior to art, in these minds, and those of us who work in the "craft" mediums such as ceramics, glass, wood and fiber have a hard time being regarded as "real artists" in the way that painters and sculptors are.
Adamson writes about the discipline of ceramics shortly after mid-century. You might want to substitute "fiber" for "ceramics" and see if the discussion rings true.
But first he talks about Robert Morris, one of the so-called Process Artists who really didn't want to be like the Abstract Expressionists. He quotes Morris as saying, "When I sliced unto the plywood with my Skilsaw, I could hear, beneath the ear-damaging whine, a stark and refreshing 'no' reverberate off the four walls: no to transcendence and spiritual values, heroic scale, anguished decisions, historicizing narrative, valuable artifact, intelligent structure, interesting visual experience."
Adamson continues: "It was from this attitude that Process Art, the most craft-like of the twentieth-century avant gardes, was born.... If Morris was a sculptor who did not want to make a modern sculpture, then the story of ceramics is primarily that of potters who did not want to make pottery. Of course, both of these efforts were doomed to failure. Ceramics, defined as such, could only continue to be ceramics, and for the most part, those who work with clay have remained identified as craftspeople rather than contemporary artists. Process Artists, meanwhile, despite their seeming attempts not to, made modern art objects that were revered as sculpture.
... The two groups were traveling in opposite directions and, in some sense, each was striving for the other's condition -- the one vainly trying to claw its way to the category of sculpture and the other trying to escape from it."
Interestingly, Morris tried to claw his way out not just with plywood but with fiber, making many works out of draped or piled felt that were regarded as sculpture, just as the first generation of "fiber artists" were trying to claw their own way in to being regarded as sculpture.
Robert Morris, Brown Felt, 1973
I find it both amusing and discouraging to think of two groups of people desperately headed in opposite directions. The grass is always greener...
And yet the High Art world does this all the time, arbitrarily awarding designations that are difficult to escape. Get your MFA from Yale as a painter, and you can subsequently have as many New York gallery shows as you want in whatever medium and technique you choose. Make quilts, if that's what floats your boat, but make sure you aren't too meticulous about the craft techniques. You might even want to have your mom do the actual sewing.
On the other hand, start out making quilts for your bed or your children, and become so accomplished that your work comes off the bed and onto the wall, and is aesthetically stunning, but you'll never get that New York gallery show, even if your quilts look just like the guy's in the previous paragraph. Or far more likely, even if your quilts look a whole lot better than the guy's in the previous paragraph.
Go figure.
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I'm cross-posting this to Ragged Cloth Cafe, a blog about art of which I am one of seven regular contributors. You might like to check it out.
The high art world leaves me laughing. My SIL is such with the Ivy League alphabet to obviously hold superior court over all. Yet my original quilts for each of the nieces and nephews for their Bar or Bat Mitzvahs have been anxiously awaited and shown off at family gatherings to her loud chagrin. Most quilters I know are functional members of society in addition, they don't require a life subsidized by grants or family. Success is an individuals scale I suppose.
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