Discussions about art can be sketchy (pardon the pun)
especially when expectations are high. Over the years I have sat through some
pretty dry and overly intellectual seminars that I thoroughly enjoyed. Last week’s
talk at the ICA was not one of those evenings. Leaving my cave, I succumbed to
the need to prolong post-modern musings in my head and hear about artist,
Barbara Kasten with the specific topic being POMO’s relevance now. I never
understood why the whole era was ditched, virtually overnight. This had a
devastating affect on artists who’d immersed themselves in October Magazine and
couldn’t adapt to becoming Jeff Koons, the best example of an uber-artist, post-POMO.
To stay in fashion, I use his cologne.
The term used next was Neo-Geo. What did it mean?! Debord-like
Situationism and anarchy I can understand, but you take it with a grain of
salt. After a fairly cool decade (90’s) where installation ruled and painting
waned, we find ourselves in an endless epoch (almost 2 decades!) where both
ends of the spectrum flourish. Booming art and auction sales are great for an expanding
pool of blue chip (dead) painters while international Biennales serve the
contemporary, non-objective circuit. Is Alex Katz blue chip? You bet! So, it is
interesting to see anyone at a museum mention the term, (long out of favor) “Post
Modernism.” Today, we say “Blue Chip/Modern and Contemporary.” I touch on this dichotomy
in my hilarious, unpublished novel, WORK
SHY.
Youthful curator, Alex Klein – perfect name for a museum employee
– set the stage for an interesting evening with a brief run-down of the period.
She even mentioned Blade Runner. The
1982 film is now easy code for POMO and encapsulates the long gap between 1985
and 2015. Why Klein left out our own iconic architects Robert Ventura and his
wife Denis Scott-Brown (the inventors of POMO!) is curious. The two luke-warm artists
showing PowerPoint presentations didn’t improve the situation.
To condense things is
possible. Take one aspect of post modernism imaged by Blade Runner: historical mash-up. My theory is that Philip Dick’s
story Androids Often Dream of Electric
Sheep (published 1968) was the first film (see also Brazil, 1985) to present “now” as futuristic dystopia. This leads
us to time-travelogue. Today, we casually refer to this ubiquitous “time
travel” as if it was a simple state of mind. Or worse, a life-style choice.
This is writer’s, J. G. Ballard’s, “inner space” which describes perfectly our
use of technology to create fantasy worlds instead of flying to real ones in
suspended animation.
Bladerunner came
to represent Steam Punk, year zero. The term was quite rightly put in place
well after the fact. I, myself often pretend to be an Edwardian dandy in futuristic
rock clubs. Both steam, punks and rain surrounded Harrison Ford as he hunted
rogue Replicants. The ICA should note that every film after Bladerunner owes something visually to
director, Ridley Scott if not the writer, Philip K. Dick who barely lived to
see it. These days, the best illustration of our historically mixed condition is
a sad, cheapo satellite dish on the roof of decaying Victorian house.
3 comments:
Speaking of dystopian futures: what's Logan's Run? Soylent Green? THX1138? (or even Fritz Lang's Metropolitan?).
And those of us who identify periods by their economic formations never stopped using post-modern to describe the current moment.
Good movie. I hope Harrison Ford decides to keep his word since the plane crash and make a second Blade Runner. I'm convinced, however, that the first Postmodernists were just as instrumental in creating the Postmodern condition as reacting against it. There are good points and bad points. As for myself, as an artist who paints, I rejoice in the supposed death of Postmodernism - but am cautious about what might replace it. Neo-Geo? Hmmm.... I'm such a fucking savage/dinosaur.
My concentration on Blade Runner purposely discounts the hundreds of science fiction films that preceded it because it is distinct. It can be used as a short cut to understanding the post modern moment which (if you were not there) is easily lost in the profusion of daily information. It also targets the idea of what is human (vs. artificial intelligence) and that is totally topical.
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