Showing posts with label America. Show all posts
Showing posts with label America. Show all posts

14/03/2014

My Kid Could Paint That


In the last week of July 2008, Carol, Steve and I watched My Kid Could Paint That another great art documentary featured on BBC4. The documentary tracked the media sensation of Maria Olmstead a four-year-old ‘child-prodigy’ of abstract paintings - whose reputation and that of her parents - was then undermined by questions about the father’s involvement in the making of the little girls paintings.                                                                                                                            
When I was a child my mother did everything in her power to belittle my artistic ambitions, my drawings and my study – so to see these parents bill-and-coo over every childish scrawl made by Maria made me pause for thought. 

At first, her father showed her paintings in a bar. Later in a gallery run by a disgruntled photo-realist painter - who wanted to get back at an art world that valued his paintings which he had worked on for months – lower than a canvas by an abstract painter who had slapped his together over a long night. She became an overnight media star on American television and started selling her canvases for up to £20,000. Then a Sixty-Minutes special on her – questioned whether she had painted her large canvases by herself. The family had agreed to let the producers film her painting. However the painting she painted on film - lacked the polish, finish and focused intensity of the canvases she had previously exhibited and sold.                                                                                                 

The documentary recorded the sudden fall from grace of this little girl’s parents and her innocence amidst some very unsavoury adult characters.             
                                           
The parents then made their own film of Maria painting – and that canvas too, lacked the power of her exhibited paintings. However, it did look like the last painting she had made on film. I was convinced that her shifty father had been responsible for most of the final work on her paintings. Not that it mattered a dam – her abstract paintings – regardless of who made them – were pointless and crude pastiches of Abstract-Expressionist painters like Pollock, Hoffman, Still and Kline – over sixty years after the fact.      
                                                                                             
For a six year old, to paint abstract scrawls on canvases - with paints bought and put in place by her father – and under his advice was outrageously crass. That she became so successful only proved again to me how senseless art had become. She was nothing but a pawn in an adult game of promotion, hype, greed and deception. You could have taken any half-way talented six year old – supplied them with large professional canvases and paints and achieved the same results. Picasso was a real child prodigy – he made things even very talented adults couldn’t make. ‘Prodigies’ like Maria simply made paintings anyone could make.        
                                                                                
The Abstract-Expressionists were not children – they were mature men who had paid their dues and pursued their vision through many hard times. The originality, ambition and vision of their art, was based on complex avant-garde ideas - not traditional hard won techniques. Pollock, Rothko, Kline and de Kooning spent decades learning their trade, developing their vision and evolving their signature styles. To parody them was easy. But, to come up with something as original and groundbreaking was far harder – just ask any young art student.