Thursday, November 30, 2017

Nudity, high living, intense emotion, danger, tragedy and erotic allure










Nudity, high living, intense emotion, danger, tragedy and erotic allure

A new book looks at Roman choices of mythological subjects

Roman painting from the House of the Citharist, Pompeii, of the seductive Greek heroine Ariadne sprawled on the beach awaiting rescue by Dionysos, the saviour god of drink and enjoyment (around AD50-79). Courtesy of the National Archaeological Museum, Naples.
While waiting in southern Italy to part from her husband Marcus Brutus during the Roman civil wars, the aristocratic Porcia found herself overcome with emotion in contemplating a mythological picture. This was a painting of Andromache and Hector taking leave of each other at Troy through which Porcia made a detailed comparison of her sad situation with that of the Trojan heroine. Porcia and Brutus were top-level Roman viewers: they breathe the refined air of Hellenic literature, art and mythology.
At some distance towards the other end of the social scale, however, we also find an ageing citizen, one Allius, comparing his deceased girlfriend with the heroine-huntress Atalanta—the point of comparison is her beautiful legs. He had shared her with a friend in a long and harmonious threesome, and he and this companion, Allius writes, were as close as Orestes and Pylades. Romans of many social stations saw themselves in the refracting mirror of Greek heroic myth. In poetry and pictures, their emotions, experiences and aspirations were mediated and intensified by mythological comparison and contemplation.
Greek myth pervaded Roman art and figured artefacts well into late antiquity, and the large Hellenistic back catalogue of mythological images provided a protean and expressive repertoire capable of responding to almost any contemporary need. We want then to understand Roman choices: why that heroic story for this place, time and context, and how were its inherited visual schemes, which made the story recognisable, adjusted for its new setting?
The interaction of Roman life and Greek visual myth has been a fertile area of recent research, and Zahra Newby’s excellent new book, Greek Myths in Roman Art and Culture, distils some of the best work on this subject and adds its own perspective—that of rhetorical exemplarity. It is concerned principally with three large bodies of mythological art: villa statuary, Pompeian wall painting and Roman sarcophagi. One of its many strengths is its carefully researched presentation of the precise contexts in which the art was experienced. Breathtaking marble groups from aristocratic seaside villas, romantically themed fresco pictures in the houses of provincial Pompeian office-holders, and small marble sarcophagi from the tomb interiors of Ostian craftsmen need all to be assessed rather differently, according to their context and function.
With such sensitivity to context, it is surprising that class and social level are here vigorously excluded from any shaping role. It should by now be clear that much of Roman art under the Empire comes from its socially middling levels: tradesmen, contractors, workshop owners and prosperous ex-slaves. And although there is nothing particularly middle-class about individual choices of mythological art, it remains significant and interesting to find out which myths in aggregate were in fact favoured at such levels. The class aspect of the extraordinary body of second-century sarcophagi that carry mythological friezes can be documented and is perhaps more pointed than current thinking allows. A lot were certainly for non-elite buyers, and they have among the most extraordinary range of mythological narratives from antiquity. Their densely packed and brilliantly imbricated scenes, run together in continuous friezes, are also unusually difficult to read.
Without detailed knowledge of Euripidean drama, a viewer would have no idea what is represented, for example, on Medea sarcophagi. In what ways the peculiar mythological choices of these sarcophagi intersected with class is a large open question—but one worth asking. If buyers were busy middle-level urban entrepreneurs, they were less likely to be familiar with the elite texts of the kind that many modern sarcophagus interpreters would like them to have been reading. Newby would like to see in mythological art at Rome “storehouses of rhetorical exempla”—that is, images that formulated exemplary ideas about Roman behaviour and identity such as we know from texts. She is then a bit surprised that the art studied is not really interested in the iconography of Roman manliness, piety and moral behaviour. It is observed correctly that the art could have been full of uplifting stories from early Roman history but they are almost nowhere to be seen. Further, the subjects that were chosen also rarely answer to this prescription (if needed, Greek myth had indeed plenty of pious stories of family concord and fierce patriotism). It is perhaps better then to leave the exempla and their moralising texts where they belong, in another part of the complex Roman cultural landscape, and to concentrate on the visual claims of the surviving art in its local contexts.
Some aristocratic old-school Romans under the Empire may have continued to see their lives in terms of distinctively “Roman” values. Most others, however, seem to have cared, at least in the privacy of their houses and tombs, more for the palpable, seductive power of certain kinds of Greek visual myth—those with pervasive nudity, sumptuous evocations of high living, high-pitched emotionality, danger, tragedy and erotic allure. This was the mirror in which Romans chose to contemplate their refracted vision of Hellenistic-style self-fulfillment.
• R.R.R. Smith is the Lincoln professor of classical archaeology and art at the University of Oxford with research interests in Greek and Roman art, and the author of The Last Statues of Antiquity (2016, with Bryan Ward-Perkins)
Greek Myths in Roman Art and Culture: Imagery, Values and Identity in Italy, 50BC-AD250
Zahra Newby
Cambridge Uni

Artists are getting poorer








Artists are getting poorer

Survey finds most earn less than £10,000 a year


A new survey reveals that most artists earn less than £10,000 a year Alice Achterhof
The majority of artists in the UK earn less than £5,000 a year after tax—and below $10,000 in the US—according to a survey of 1,533 practitioners, conducted this month by the online artist-to-market website Artfinder.
Dubbed the “Artist Income Project”, this first survey of anonymous data across several platforms, including Artfinder, finds “artists are still not paid fairly. Or at all.” All the surveyed artists are described as “independent”, meaning they sell their art directly, rather than through a gallery.
In the UK survey of 823 artists, 55.1% say they earn between £1,000 and £5,000 net per year while 17.7% earn between £5,000 and £10,000. At the raw end, 9.3% of UK artists state their income as zero. This combined figure of 82.1% is worse than the findings of a previous survey of 1,061 artists, conducted by a-n, an artist data company, which in 2013 found that 72% of artists earned under £10,000.
Of the US respondents, 75.2% make less than $10,000, with the majority (48.7%) in the $1,000 to $5,000 bracket; 5.1% in the US stated their income as nothing. Based on the 98% of artists who stated their gender, female artists across both geographies fared marginally worse than their male counterparts: 83.6% earned under £10,000 (versus 77% men).
This survey may only be a small slice of the whole, but its findings ring true, says Rob Pepper, the recently appointed principal of London’s The Art Academy school—and a practicing artist. “I used to believe that winning prizes was a mark of success for an artist but am now of the opinion that simply living as an artist is the greatest achievement,” he says.
Artfinder’s data is a part of a global survey of 10,000 of artists on its site, of whom almost half (47%) say that their artistic practice accounts for less than a quarter of their income; 15% say they work full time jobs while also selling their art.
Pepper says The Art Academy’s forthcoming Bachelor of Arts includes a professional development module that covers additional income streams for artists, including making limited edition works and teaching.
The situation is not particularly better for artists who sell through galleries, Pepper says. “One friend told me his sales target for a one-month show was £100,000. This is enormous pressure, plus his gallery only gives him a show every 18 months at best. Take off gallery commission [usually 50%], VAT, then studio costs in London over two years—you’re not even making £10,000.”

Wednesday, November 29, 2017

Louvre Abu Dhabi, an Arabic-Galactic Wonder, Revises Art History




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Works that qualify as “classics” to a Western viewer feel surreally exotic at the multiculturalist Louvre Abu Dhabi, including Jacques-Louis David’s image of Napoleon Bonaparte crossing the Alps, on loan from Versailles. CreditKatarina Premfors for The New York Times
ABU DHABI, United Arab Emirates — A decade in the planning and five years past its due date, the Louvre Abu Dhabi has finally opened here in this sun-scoured capital city of the United Arab Emirates. And whatever else can be said of the new museum, it’s a sight to see.
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The Louvre Abu Dhabi: A filigreed half-sphere resting on a low base infiltrated by water channels, it could pass as a spaceship. CreditKatarina Premfors for The New York Times
Starchitecture is out of fashion these days, but it can still produce visual wonders. The look of the Louvre Abu Dhabi, designed by Jean Nouvel, might be described as Arabic-galactic. In the form of an immense, filigreed gray half-sphere resting on a low base infiltrated by water channels, it could pass as a spaceship, an unfinished mosque or a Venetian pavilion set on the edge of the Persian Gulf.
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Lemi Ponifasio, a Samoan artist and choreographer (at rear, in suit), after a museum performance with traditional Emirati musicians. CreditKatarina Premfors for The New York Times
Seen from beneath, the filigree is porous and open to the sky, but so densely layered as to create a light-dappled shade. And the dome completely covers a cluster of white-walled, flat-roofed museum buildings — galleries, an auditorium, a cafe — that look both white-box Modern and like traditional-style Emirati houses seen in villages outside this vertical glass-and-steel city.
The museum is technically in the city, though not in a way that feels organic. It stands on a large outcropping named — probably by the powerful, government-run Abu Dhabi Tourism and Cultural Authority, or its development arm — Saadiyat Island, or “Island of Happiness.” Connected by a bridge to the mainland, this site will eventually be a “cultural district,” bristling with hotels, condos, malls and other museums, including an Abu Dhabi Guggenheim. Paid for with hydrocarbon cash and built largely by South Asian laborers, Saadiyat has been fabricated primarily as a destination for a global leisured class.
The Louvre Abu Dhabi is a fabrication, too. It isn’t an official Louvre franchise. For the equivalent of $1.15 billion, the museum has temporarily leased the Louvre brand. It can use the illustrious name for 30 years and borrow works from the Louvre and a dozen other French state institutions (the Musée d’Orsay, the Centre Pompidou, the Bibliothèque Nationale, etc.) for a decade. This will give the new museum time to assemble a permanent collection — the acquisition process is well underway — and create its own version of a global art history.
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And what does that history, currently fleshed out with loans, look like? Item by item, pretty sensational. And how does it read as a narrative? The narrative is engagingly well paced, but — and this is true of every encyclopedic museum I’m familiar with — sugarcoated and incomplete.
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“Food for Thought — Al Muallaqat,” by Maha Malluh, an artist working in Saudi Arabia, is an assemblage of stew pots. Blackened by use, they retain the marks of the past but also the imprint of the stories told during mealtimes in nomadic tradition. Maha Malluh has transformed the pots into a visual poem, in tribute to classical Arab poetry. CreditKatarina Premfors for The New York Times
Spread through 23 galleries, the inaugural display of some 600 objects — 300 from French museums, two dozen from Middle Eastern collections and around 230 from the Louvre Abu Dhabi itself — adheres to a textbook timeline. Where it is innovative is in being intercultural, with Western and non-Western work shown side by side.
A few big international museums have experimented with this kind of mix. None that I know of have committed to it, made it a house style. Elsewhere, old colonialist classifications, shaped along geographic and ethnic lines, are still deeply ingrained, not to mention politically useful. But the Louvre Abu Dhabi has not only gone with a fully integrated model; it also promotes that model as its distinguishing feature.
The way it works is clearly set out in an introductory “vestibule,” where vitrines hold small groups of thematically related objects. A bronze statuette of the Egyptian goddess Isis nursing the infant Horus, from 400-800 B.C.; a 14th-century ivory Virgin and Child from France; and a 19th-century carved wood mother and child from the Democratic Republic of Congo together project a common image of maternity across cultures and millenniums. Three gold funerary masks — from ancient China, Peru and Syria — suggest a widely shared association of precious materials with immortality and remembrance.
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The “First Great Powers Gallery,” with works from Egypt and Iraq. The Louvre Abu Dhabi is pointing out links among cultures, hoping this strategy will make all art feel more approachable to a global audience.CreditKatarina Premfors for The New York Times
This sort of grouping can be simplistic and historically inexact, but as a strategy, it has its uses. It’s really the only way to go for a broad-spectrum collection in progress. Although the Louvre Abu Dhabi has done a lot of buying — prehistoric to contemporary — since 2009, its rapidly gathered holdings have breadth but not depth. To show single strong objects from all over the map is a way to make a virtue of this limitation.
A mix-and-match approach also has potential advantages for education and visitor engagement. The Louvre Abu Dhabi is banking on the theory that pointing out links among a wide variety of cultures will make all art feel more approachable to the global audience it hopes to attract. Once viewers gain the habit of spotting connections, they may come to accept that all cultures are equally valuable and personally relevant. That, at least, seems to be the thinking, and it makes sense.
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Visitors view a 1498 Pentateuch, among the most important scriptural writings of Judaism, from Yemen. It is exhibited alongside a seventh-century Quran and a Gothic Bible. CreditKatarina Premfors for The New York Times
After the introductory gallery, the installation moves on in epochal chunks, from “The First Villages” to “The Global Stage” of the 21st century, with religion, trade and politics as driving themes. The route, as laid out, doesn’t offer much in the way of scholarly news, but fabulous images abound.
A monumental sculpture of a two-headed, joined-at-the-shoulders human form is hand-modeled in plaster (you can almost see the impression of thumb prints) and dated around 6500 B.C. On loan from the Department of Antiquities in Jordan, it’s Giacometti before Giacometti. Nearby and much smaller, but every bit as magnetic, is a statuette of a gamin-faced Bactrian “princess,” dated 2300-1700 B.C., from what is now modern Afghanistan, wrapped in what looks like a floor-length puffer coat. That this sculpture is a recent Louvre Abu Dhabi acquisition confirms that there’s some smart (and provenance-challenging) shopping going on.
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A monumental sculpture with two heads, hand-modeled in plaster, from about 6500 B.C. and on loan from Jordan, is “Giacometti before Giacometti.”CreditJonathan Gibbons/Louvre Abu Dhabi
Both sculptures are naturals in a Middle Eastern museum. But there are surprises to come a few galleries on, in a pairing of globalist soul mates: A wood sculpture of a near-nude Jesus from 16th-century Bavaria and an entirely nude male ancestor figure from Mali stand side by side. Elsewhere, Qurans, Bibles and Buddhist sutras float together in protective darkness. Far-flung place names — Beirut, Dakar, Dubai, Fontainebleau, Jingdezhen, Mathura, Teotihuacan — appear on adjacent labels.
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A Bactrian “princess” from Central Asia, dated 2300-1700 B.C.CreditThierry Ollivier/Louvre Abu Dhabi
Works that qualify as instantly recognizable “classics” to a Western viewer feel surreally exotic in this multiculturalist environment. Leonardo da Vinci’s “La Belle Ferronnière” (1495-99), a kind of second-tier “Mona Lisa” sent by the Louvre in Paris, is one. Another is an 1822 Gilbert Stuart portrait of a schoolmarmish George Washington that has taken up permanent residence here. (The Louvre Abu Dhabi owns it.) And then there’s Jacques-Louis David’s towering, storm-racked equestrian image of Napoleon Bonaparte crossing the Alps, looking very far away indeed, in both miles and mood, from its home in Versailles.
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“La Belle Ferronnière,” by Leonardo da Vinci, at the Louvre Abu Dhabi. CreditKatarina Premfors for The New York Times
The David has been dutifully integrated into a thematic ensemble, but to some of us — and probably more and more of us in the internet age — it’s a rock star.
In an “Arab world” museum, the presence here of a hagiographic image of Napoleon, colonialist invader of Islamic North Africa and pilferer of non-Western art, is ripe with political irony. Yet nothing is made of this. Only further on, in a section of late-19th- and early-20th-century works grouped under the label “Modern Orientalism,” is the impact of colonialism on art acknowledged. And there it is given a positive spin.
At no point, in fact, does the overall installation, basically an illustrated chronicle of world cultural history, raise basic critical issues. Slavery, ubiquitous through the ages, and notably on the Arabian Peninsula, goes unmentioned. Ideological repression, political and religious, is skimmed over. Warrior culture, the wielding of power through almost exclusively male aggression, is given a pass; more than that, it’s glamorized. In a section called “The Art of War,” the message seems to be: Look how well fighters dressed!
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A gallery devoted to Modern art features works by Picasso, Magritte and Miró, along with the kinetic art of Jean Tinguely. Left, “Orange press,” his 1960 sculpture made from everyday objects, including a bucket and a citrus juicer. CreditKatarina Premfors for The New York Times
In short, the Louvre Abu Dhabi fails where most, if not all, encyclopedic art museums do: in truth-telling. And the failure applies to the present as much as to the past. In news releases and public advertising, the institution promises to be “a museum for everyone”; to show “humanity in a new light”; to embody an “openness” and “harmony” reflecting the “tolerant and accepting environment” of Emirati society. But in the years since the building broke ground, international human rights groups have repeatedly criticized the Abu Dhabi government for mistreatment of immigrant laborers at work on Saadiyat Island projects.
During the museum’s inaugural week, two Swiss journalists, filming laborers as part of their coverage of the opening, were arrested by the police, grilled, forced to sign a “confession” and then expelled from the country. Over the past several years, people campaigning for workers’ rights have been barred from entering Abu Dhabi, or deported.
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“Walking Man, on a Column,” by Auguste Rodin, cast in 2006 by Fonderie de Coubertin. Rear, Jenny Holzer’s commissioned marble relief of cuneiform text transcribes a creation myth from a Mesopotamian tablet.CreditKatarina Premfors for The New York Times
A walk through Mr. Nouvel’s domed museum complex, with its luminous shade and its breeze-channeling sea vistas, is an enchantment, almost enough to make you forget grim physical and social realities that went into creating it. And the manifold beauty of galleries filled with charismatic objects nearly persuades you not to remember that art is a record of crimes as well as of benign achievements. It takes an exercise in ethical balance to engage fully with our great museums, to walk the shaky bridge they construct between aesthetics and politics. A mindful visit to the Louvre Abu Dhabi requires this balance. That may be what is most universal about it.
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A museum guide, center, in the final gallery, “A Global Stage,” before a photographic piece, “Family Tree,” by the Chinese artist Zhang Huan, 2000. CreditKatarina Premfors for The New York Times
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