Showing posts with label Dublin. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Dublin. Show all posts

14/03/2014

Order, Desire, Light



At the end of the third week of August 2008, Carol and I went to IMMA - where we saw three very interesting exhibitions. Order, Desire, Light was the first show we looked at. It consisted of about 250 contemporary drawings - by various world-renowned artists. It was early in the day and I was not in a critical frame of mind. I felt tired and stoned. So I found it enjoyable nonsense. There were strong works by Sigmar Polke, Chris Ofili, Albert Oehlen, Miquel Barceló, Mark Bradford, and Raymond Pettibon. However most of the other works were total rubbish. Many of the frames - made for these notes on paper – required greater labour and required more skill to make. I told Carol that I had burnt drawings better than most of these feckless doodles.                                                                            

In the midst of all this PO-MO child’s play - the Charcoal drawings of William Kentridge stood out a mile. His muscular drawing of ancient ruins was beautiful – if somewhat conventional and boring. However, his other drawing on torn and glued sheets from a book made Carol and I snort with disgust. We had both become sick of the sight of drawings on torn up book pages – it was a gimmick long past its sell by date.                                                                                        

Then we saw paintings, photographs and videos by the German/Brazilian artist Janaina Tschape. I thought her photographs and videos were generic art world junk. She posed in funny cellular and biomorphic outfits in the jungle and in the sea. I had seen its type done a hundred times already. However, she was saved in my estimation by some beautiful abstract oil paintings - which again played with vegetative, botanical and microscopic forms in a kind of twenty-first century parody of Gustav Klimt’s semi-abstract ornamentation.                                                                                
  
Finally, we saw a show of works inspired by Africa by the Spanish painter Miquel Barceló. The show included; ink drawings, watercolours, oil paintings, pottery and sculptures - all inspired by his numerous vacations and residencies in West Africa and Mali in particular since 1988. To be honest I had not seen anything like it in Dublin for decades. It all reeked of the 1980s and not in a very good way.                                                                                                                                 
I found it hard to write about such mediocrity. Barceló’s work was worthy, skilful, inventive and sincere – yet at the same time, it lacked true originality, feeling or vision. Although I delighted seeing expressive, well draw and sensually painted works – most of it had a second-hand quality to it. Barceló’ was a wriggly and spritely draughtsman – somewhat in the vein of Tiepolo and was an adventurous manipulator of paint. However I was continually reminded of better painters who had undoubtedly influenced him like; Jean Fautrier, Wols, Jean Dubuffet, Joseph Beuys, Jannis Kounellis, Julian Schnabel, Sandro Chia, Francisco Clemente and Enzo Cucchi. Overall, I had the impression of seeing yet another playboy painter with a facile talent and too much money for his own good.

The Diving Bell and the Butterfly



Later in the week on Friday 8th - I went with Carol to see the showing of Julian Schnabel's new film The Diving Bell and the Butterfly (2007.) As you know Schnabel was a massive hero of mine – I knew almost all his paintings - I had seen his two excellent previous films (Basquait (1996) which was about the painter Jean-Michel Basquiat and Before Night Falls (2000) which was about the Cuban poet Reinaldo Arenas) and I had read literally hundreds of reviews on his exhibitions. So when I heard he would be giving a Q&A after the film I had to be there. The night before the film I was in the pits of despair. I wondered if I would have the courage to ask him anything. I wondered what I could say. I wondered what he might make of my work if I showed him it. Then I recalled what I had written of him – the praise and the critique. I knew he’d like the former and hate the latter. Which only served to depress me even more. So by the time I got to the Irish Film Centre - I was in a full-blown self-loathing and self-important panic. Fortunately the film was wonderful and a salutary lesson on how we should always remember there are many people in the world far worse off than ourselves – not that that old simplistic truism ever seems to help anyone except those that like to lecture.                                 

The Diving Bell and The Butterfly, a French language film – was based on the book by the same name - by Jean-Dominique Bauby (often called Jean-Do by his friends in the film.) Bauby was the elegant jet-setting editor of the French Elle fashion magazine in Paris in the 1990s. He was married with two children (in the film there are three because Schnabel said two children seemed too lonely and the little girl was too cute not to put in the movie) and lived a carefree life of parties and mistresses.                                                                                                                                      
Then suddenly at the age of forty-three, he had a massive stroke - which left him paralyzed from head to toe. The film started at the point when Bauby woke up from a coma - and discovered he could not move or speak or even swallow. We saw what he saw through his eyes. He was told he had ‘Locked-In-Syndrome’. To add insult to injury his right eye - had to be sown up for fear it might become infected - leaving only his left eye open and able to blink. So most of the film was scene from Bauby’s point of view – literally – when he blinked the camera blinked - and we spent the film looking up at people who loom in and out of view. The effect was terrifying but never melodramatic. This of course could have been a nightmare of a film to watch. But Bauby’s humour never left him and he fell back on his memories and imagination to pass the long ‘locked-in’ hours.                                        

Bauby’s beautiful therapist taught him to how to communicate with the world by blinking. But he was as interested in looking at the lovely therapist as communicating messages to the world.  She recited the alphabet and he blinked when she arrived at the letter he was thinking of and she wrote it down. So throughout the film the French alphabet was recited - and it took on a tragic, lyrical and bittersweet quality.                                                                                                  

Placed in this unimaginable prison of the body he called the Diving Bell – Bauby’s decided to write a book on his life – if only to give himself a task to concentrate on and distract him from the sorrow, boredom and fear of his condition. Thus the film weaved in and out of memory, fantasy and reality as Dauby - was condemned to see it. We learnt about his old beloved father, his put-upon wife, his mistress and his precious children – none of whom he could hold or touch.                                      

Unlike Schnabel’s previous films – The Diving Bell and The Butterfly never descended into mawkish sentimentality. Bauby became a kind of everyman in this film – dealing with the terror of illness, death and nothingness that we will all face in the end. This was not your usual vomit-inducing Hallmark Channel story of disability – for one thing there was no miracle cure - and Bauby died ten days after his book was published. However it was still a film of hope – that we are all part of something larger – that there is some meaning to our personal trials. It was notable that later in the talk Schnabel said that he thought art could never be pessimistic even when it dealt with the darkest themes - because creativity was always somewhat optimistic.  As with Schnabel’s previous films - I was struck by the visual beauty and quirkiness of his storytelling in both imagery and dialog – though I was a bit annoyed to see him yet again stick his own paintings and sculptures and photographs of his children in all over the place for no apparent reason.                      
                                                       
Afterwards Schnabel came into the auditorium and gave a brief Q&A with John Kelly from The View arts programme on RTÉ 1. Julian had a big black winter coat on covering up his caramel coloured jacket under which he was wearing pyjamas - in a deep, rich, shade of purple he often uses in his canvases. His hair was longish and wild and his beard thick. He had a pair of yellow tinted black glasses on - and a green scarf wrapped around his neck.  Someone asked him why he wore pyjamas he said something about it being like a suit and yet more comfortable. I thought he did it to be different. Everyone needs a gimmick.                                                                                                  

Then some batty woman asked him what he was going to do about the plight of all the old people in care homes in a similar state! What more was he supposed to do? He had just spent two years making this film to give shape to this kind of human tragedy and not in the usual glib: “I do a lot of work of charity” - kind of bullshit way. But Schnabel deflected the question very diplomatically and said his next film would be about the lives of Palestinian women.                                           

In fact, the Julian Schnabel I saw was not the brash arrogant Yuppie I had seen and read in interviews in from the 1980s. Perhaps the critical lashing of his reputation as a painter non-stop for over twenty years - and the death of his mother and father recently had lead him to a far more human understanding of himself and his life – maybe he just grew up. Though, I had to smile a little when I heard him give out about his daughter Stella who is a poet and actress. She was having a strop and Schnabel cut her up: “Stop feeling entitled to everything! The world doesn’t owe you a living! I still love you! Call me when you change your attitude!” Or something to that affect. He was basically attacking an egotistical flaw in her character he had been castigated for possessing - by art critics like Robert Hughes, Donald Kuspit and Brian Sewell in the 1980s. However I thought Schnabel must have been a great father to have – he spoke with real tenderness of his five children and gave special attention to a young boy called Noah in the audience. I wondered what my life would have been like if my father had lived.                                                                                                            
Near the very end, I tried to ask a question by timidly raising my hand. But thankfully I was not picked. When the talk was finished – I lunged up to Schnabel in a panic. “Julian! Julian can you sign my copy of CVJ?” (CVJ was Schnabel’s autobiography of 1987 - which I had bought in 1992 and cherished ever since.) “Yeah sure!” He replied cautiously. “I’m sorry it’s a bit battered!” I apologized. “Don’t worry that means you read it!” He replied. I could hardly bring myself to look him in the eye – I was so terrified. “I fucking love your work! You’re a Hero of mine!” I proclaimed – but still unable to look at him full on. “Gosh thanks.” He replied rather bemused. “I have a new signature I am using.” He said “Oh right cool!” I replied. “Eh I don’t have a pen, have you a pen?” He asked. “Yes! Yes!” I replied - handing him a thick black permanent marker. “What’s your name?” “Eh, Cy… Cypher.” I stammered. “Cypher with an i or a y?” “Eh a y.” I replied almost trembling. He signed on the front cover of CVJ: ‘To Cypher From Baby Pint 08’. “Thank you so much!” I replied. I had brought two of my catalogues in to maybe show or give him - but I quickly decided not to. I did not want to spoil the moment. I didn’t want the rejection – not from him. I fled.             

Some girl asked him something and he said: “Ask Cypher! You two should exchange numbers!” But my head was swimming and all I wanted to do was run away. But then the line to get out of the cinema was so long that I was stuck in the line near him! He was talking to the little boy Noah and saying he would try to get him a poster and sign it. “I don’t usually like posters, I want people to but my paintings!” He told the boy. “You know this is my first time in Dublin I like it!” He said to someone else. Later outside I saw him with friends as I came back from the toilets - but I could not even look at him. My girlfriend took some great photographs of him signing my book.                       

That night I was plunged again into utter despair thinking of everything Schnabel had achieved compared to me. I thought about how; so many of my paintings - were nothing but brazen rip-offs of his various styles – except without his scale, originality or ambition. Then I thought about how utterly selfish and self-obsessed I was - and how little I contributed to society and the lives of other people. Then I thought about the disease of fame and my own sickness. But the following day I felt a huge weight lifted off my shoulders. There were few other people in the world I would care to meet and that at least for the sake of my nerves was a good thing.

David McDermott and Peter McGough in IMMA



I went on Tuesday 5th of February with Carol and Stephen - to the opening of An Experience of Amusing Chemistry: Photogrpahs 1990-1890 by David McDermott and Peter McGough in IMMA The two Americans who are now in their mid fifties - had emerged in the early 1980s as part of the East Village scene in New York. In an age of mannerism, pastiche and neo-this-and-neo-that - they went even further into the regurgitation of the past by living their life as though they were in the early 1890s. I suppose in this they were strangely more honest than their peers. They wore (somewhat tatty and thread-bare) vintage suits from the 1890s, photographed themselves in their Spartan studio in arch poses that recalled the eccentricity of early photographers and their subjects - and also signed their paintings with dates that came decades before they were even born.                                                            
  
As you know, I had meet David McDermott many times in Dublin – but then who hadn’t. He was a very nice man – very funny, very camp, very gay, very outgoing, very eccentric and unusually honest for the art world. But as artists we couldn’t have been further apart. He had no phone, electricity or modern gadgets in his home – which I visited once. But at the opening I saw Peter McGough had a digital camera circa 2007 - which he quickly hid in his pocket!                          

Their show was of vintage style photographs of themselves and their friends taken with old plate cameras and developed using arcane print techniques like Salt-Prints, Cyanotypes, Palladium Prints and Gum Bichromates. The poses recalled early homoerotic erotica, nineteenth century Dandies, and Christian iconography. Basically, lounging young men in summer linens, looking mournful and interesting.                                                                                                 

Like with their previous show in IMMA in 1998 they went all out to impress with their professionalism and perfectionism. Instead of the usual wine there was Moet Champagne, there was a very expensive catalogue (at €58 it was too much for a fickle fan like me) as well as two forms of giveaway texts. In order to get the lighting as close to daylight as possible (it was a dark cold February night) they hired a lighting company to shine spotlights in the windows of the galleries from outside. Inside they displayed their photographs in black and gold frames hung high and low and in banks as was fashionable in the early 1900s. In the centre of the rooms they had the large old plate cameras - which they had used - and the walls of the first room was hand painted to look like Victorian wallpaper. I respected this attention to detail and professionalism - and found their early rather amateurish photographs from the 1980s (oops should that be the 1880s) charming and funny. However, I found the later photographs more mannered and banal.                                              

Ultimately, I could not see the point of any of it. I too found myself becoming nostalgic – but for the good old days of the religious painters or even the Abstract-Expressionists – when art really did aspire to something greater than the recording of the trivial and theatrical lives of artists – but then who was I to talk! However compared to the art students they inspired in the noughties - McDermott & McGough were practically old masters.                                               

13/03/2014

Louise Bourgeois: The Wicked Little Girl



In the first week of October 2007, I saw on BBC 1 - a very telling documentary on Louise Bourgeois – who at the age of 96 - was generally considered to be the greatest living female artist in the world. In her long career (as long as Picasso’s) Bourgeois had made: Cubist and Surreal oil paintings, Tribal-like wooden towers, marble phallic shaped abstractions, rubber phallus's and breasts, architectural spaces filed with menacing domestic props and symbolic sculptures, embroidered rants, tapestry masks (which cross 18th century French Tapestry design with African masks), giant steel female spiders (their belly's full of eggs), and countless heartfelt, uncanny and symbolic watercolours, drawings and prints. At the time of the documentary Bourgeois was the subject of a major retrospective in Tate Modern in London – it was an exhibition I ached to see – but simply could not get to.
           

However, having seen two exhibitions dedicated to her – the first in The Douglas Hyde Gallery and the second in IMMA - I totally agreed that she was the greatest female artist of my today. Nevertheless, when seen in a wider historical perspective – how good was she really?
           

There was no doubt that Bourgeois had been one of the most influential artists of the previous forty years - especially on female artists. A quick look at the work made by young sculptors from the 1970s onward – revealed just how much of a debt they owed her. You only had to look for example at Kiki Smith in America, Dorothy Cross in Ireland or Tracey Emin in England - not to mention male artists like Damien Hirst. In fact, Bourgeois was the Matriarch of ‘identity-art’ and it’s most complex and intelligent exponent. But Bourgeois did not enjoy this theft of her art – she believed people were robbing her images and ideas – she was right - but it was a bit rich coming from someone who had done the same for most of her life! Her art had an original flavour to it – but like all great art it had been built upon the lessons of art history.
           

Personally, I thought she was up there with the very best hundred and fifty known artists in Western art. There were only a few dozen men or women in the west - who sacrificed so much psychic energy to their art, fought such prejudices and customs and battled so very long for recognition (she was almost seventy-one before her first major retrospective in MoMA in 1982.) However, I thought her work had not reached beyond the third rank of importance – her concerns were too private, to parochial and too baffling to ever have the universal appeal of the likes of Raphael, Monet or Warhol. Moreover, she was far from the premier groundbreaking achievements of Giotto, Michelangelo, Caravaggio, Rembrandt, Goya, Picasso, Duchamp or Dalí.
           

As a female artist – I thought she was the greatest of all time. I identified with her misandry - as a counter weight to my own misogyny. I doubted she would like me and I feared I would crumble in her terrifying presence – but I would still have been tempted to talk with her. I completely identified with her passive-aggressive anger and hostility - and I felt a kinship with her unbreakable creativity. I did not know what it was like to be a little girl afraid of her father and wanting to be a man. But I did know what it was like to be a little boy afraid of my mother and wanting to be a woman! I instinctively understood her fragmented icons, her torn words, her wounded ego, her tortured and Janus faced sexuality, and her inner battle of self. I greatly admired her intellect and sound knowledge of art history and found her captivating in interviews, take for example this great quote from her: “I want revenge for being born, I want apologies, I want blood, I want to do to others what has been done to me. To be born is to be ejected, to be abandoned – therein lies the fury.” I could not have put it better myself!
           

Bourgeois at her very best – was often revoltingly ugly – lodging panic into men and turning the stomach of many women. The nasty edge to her work put off traditional art lovers who much preferred the pure beauty and genteel femininity of Mary Cassatt, Georgia O’Keeffe and Helen Frankenthaler or the ironic detachment of Cindy Sherman. Even Frida Kahlo’s paintings were more inviting to the viewer – for she often made pain look stylish and brave.
           

Of course notions of the Western Canon like this were both ignorant of other cultures and the anonymous work of thousands of craftsmen and women throughout time - who have fashioned masterpieces without the conceit that artists after Giotto in the West have been plagued by. Just one quick example of a hardly known great non-western female artist was Lei (sister of the devout Emperor Shun in China) - reputed to be the mother of Chinese painting – a fact much lamented by the men who came after her to take over this art form.
           

Typically in the West, the mediums and subjects of female art – embroidery, tapestries, flower arranging, still-life's or maternity scenes have been denigrated as inferior art forms – while their attempts to become painters and sculptors have been handicapped by hostility masked as morality. Many female artists were restricted to the role of happy amateurs painting at home. Others who tried to make a career for themselves were blocked from the life-class, often expected to stop making art once married and certainly after having children - and their subjects restricted to the domestic scene. Which was not to say that there had not been highly successful female artists in the Western tradition – just look at Angelica Kauffmann or Elisabeth Vigee-Lebrun in the seventeenth century. However even in the 1940s an artist like Lee Krasner willingly put her own career on hold – to promote the work of her husband Jackson Pollock. Thus the handicraft of women in particular had been written out of history – and this unspoken injunction against female artists - is what Bourgeois attacked head on in her work. Like a demented child tearing apart a toy soldier - she sought to deconstruct the masculine edifice and replace it with a feminine presence. One of her key strategies being the use of needlepoint, stitching and embroidery to deliver witty and sarcastic observations on the human body.
           

Louise Bourgeois was born in Paris in 1911. Her father had wanted a boy. Bourgeois maybe wanted to be a boy herself – she certainly grew up resentful of male authority and the restricted ambitions and potential for little girls. She struck me in interviews as a kind of insane Katharine Hepburn type character – fiery, tempestuous, rebellious and wickedly funny – but with a very soft, tender and hurt hidden side.
           

According to Bourgeois – her father was a tyrant, quick to physically discipline, given to prolonged monologues and rants at the dinner table and worst of all betraying Louise’s mother by carrying on with the child’s live-in Governess. Worse still, her mother accepted this unofficial menage-a-trois – leaving Louise betrayed three times over.
           

Some cynics like Brian Sewell had asked whether her childhood warranted such an exhaustive, lengthy and repetitious exploration. So what if her father was a patriarchal philanderer – he provided her with a relatively stable home, Coco Channel dresses, trips to Cannes and paid for her expensive and privileged education. Personally, I thought it crass to question Bourgeois source of pain – maybe she had exaggerated it in her art, but that was one of the main functions of the artist – to magnify the everyday.
           

However perhaps the worst thing that Louise’s father did - was to be so very like herself. Since the 1970s Bourgeois had held a Salon - in her run down home (its rooms crammed with her work and it’s walls covered in her rants and cries of pain) in New York - with the art critic Robert Storr. At such gatherings, young artists came to show them their work - and she pressed them for the meaning of it all. “But why did you want to make that?” Seemed to be her most common question. Seeing her at her Salon I could not help wonder at the purpose and value of such sessions for those artists foolish enough to bring themselves to her. Perhaps if you were also an artist interested in auto-biographical art – they might have had some value – but to a formalist they would have be utterly useless. Fundamentally, I believed that for little Louise - who had been forced to sit and listen powerlessly to her father and other men like the Surrealist rant on – it was a chance to take to the head of the table in later life.
           

Her family was prosperous and her childhood was at least materially privileged. She grew up in a large elegant Paris house - which she was to later recreate in highly detailed scaled models - the most telling one (Cell (Choisy), 1990-1993) a large marble version in a cage with a guillotine perched over it – ready to slice it in half. Houses for Bourgeois - became cages for repression, betrayal, frustration, fear, longing and pain.                                                                                             

Her mother and father mended tapestries - so from any age Bourgeois worked with them learning the ancient skills of the loom. Some of the tapestries that they mended - contained nude nymphs and Goddesses – their owners felt embarrassed by the nudity in such works and requested that the genitals be covered up. So one of little Louise’s first jobs was to help her parents sew little bunches of grapes or fig leafs over the genitals! This crass desecration of art by ignorant philistines - probably lead to her rebellious construction of phallic and vulva sculptures in the late 1960s.
           

At the age of fifteen, she studied mathematics in the Sorbonne in Paris, and her grounding in geometry informed her early Cubist paintings. In her late twenties Bourgeois trained in the Ecole des Beaux-Arts in Paris and then worked in the studios of Bissiere and the great Cubist painter Fernand Leger. It was Leger who convinced her that her real talent lay in sculpture. He was right – she never had any real painterly gift – her paintings tend to be naïve, graphic, and linear – more interesting for their potential realization in the third dimension than for their brushwork, colour or painterly texture.
           

In the 1920s she hung around the Surrealists– but her hackles rose when they treated her as just another bit of skirt – according to her they were misogynistic men and the only women they cared for were either sluts or rich society women who would buy their art. When she said that Marcel Duchamp was like her father – it was not a compliment!
           

A year before the outbreak of World War Two - Bourgeois escaped to New York – with her new husband Robert Goldwater a reputable art historian and specialist on African art. She said he was more like her mother than her father – a real compliment in her book! Bourgeois intently fell in love with the American metropolis - she admired its scale, its ambition, its tolerance, its multi-culturalism and its greater freedom for women. I was also sure she chuckled at the gross phallic posturing of Manhattan's sky-scrappers.
           

No doubt, Goldwater and Bourgeois spent many a long hour talking about primitive art and its importance in Modern art. The out-standing biographer John Richardson in ‘Picasso a Life’ volume two (1997) described perfectly the Spaniards search for ‘the-sacred-fire’. Picasso found it in African art – which although technically brutal, simplistic and crude – exploded with psychic energy, feeling and Voodoo. I think Bourgeois found the same thing in Tribal art – but it took her decades to move beyond mere imitation of its form into a true expression of its feeling.
           

In 1949, she gave up painting and became a full time sculptor – she was thirty-eight. The fact is that Bourgeois was a late developer – her first sculptures in New York – her so called Skyscraper works were far too indebted to Brancusi, Picasso and Tribal art. She was still using other men's grammar and other men's forms. Despite the fact that MoMA bought one of her sculptures from her 1947 show – her work was ignored by the New York art world of the 1950s and 1960s. In an art market dominated by macho Abstract-Expressionism, cynical Pop art, over theorized Post-Painterly Abstraction, and pious Hard-Edged Abstraction – Bourgeois’ work looked retarded, ugly and the work of a crazy outsider.
           

Bourgeois created her first undoubted masterpiece Fillette (Little Girl) in 1968 while still largely ignored. Made of battered latex - it looks like a mangled and abused horse-sized dildo complete with balls. It is a truly ugly and compelling work – a misandristic assault on the male genitalia – made by a woman sick of sitting in silence, while men postured around her. However after a third or fourth look – one finds in it and other phallic images by her - a suppressed and surprising tenderness and tongue in cheek black humour. It is telling that she carried it under her arm like an umbrella at her triumphant MoMA show in 1982!
           

In my experience women are fascinated by penises and their responses range from; fear, disgust, contempt, hysteria, hilarity, affection, love - and uncontrollable lust. Bourgeois managed to punctuate her phallic objects with all these emotions – sometimes within a single piece. She also linked aspects of the phallus with elements of the female body – by turns making it look like a breast, a torso, an udder or some strange growth.
           

It was only in the early 1970s that her work began to gain wider influence amongst a new generation of artists and feminist concerned with issues Bourgeois had been exploring for decades – identity, the body, gender and patriarchal structures. Now I had repeatedly attacked the rise of Feminist historians and their hyping of mediocrities like Gwen John and Tamara de Lempicka – but we can at least be thankful that they discovered and promoted Bourgeois – though she herself remained a loner belonging to no school.
           

Her breakthrough into greatness coincided with the death of her father and her beloved Robert – which plunged her into a “fantastic depression” – her words and I think they are telling. She doubted that she had earned her new-found respect - and could not sleep at night. Joseph Beuys another truly great Shaman of the twentieth century had a similar breakthrough after a prolonged ‘fantastic’ depression. These were not depressions of collapse – they were depressions of liberation. It is strange to note that the Portuguese's Paula Rego – another great female artist (equally interested in the complexes of the family) should have also produced some of her greatest works since her husband’s death.
           

Like a woman with absolutely nothing to gain or lose – Bourgeois began to create her greatest masterpieces – redolent with isolation, sexual anger and autobiographical staging. Moreover, as her work hit its stride – her newfound finances, assistants and curatorial support gave her the freedom to create ever more complex, ambitious and vast constructions. The fact is that success in art breeds success – each sale helps fund the following more ambitious projects. I sense that Bourgeois had been waiting for this moment all her life – and she threw herself into it joyfully – like a patient who meets her Park Avenue therapist at a party and unburdens herself for five hours without spending a penny.
           

In the mid 1980s Bourgeois began making her ‘cells’ – semi-architectural spaces in which she installed ambiguous and menacing objects some found - some crafted. Edward Kienholz may have influenced her – but there was a Freudian and Symbolic overtone to her work that made it her own. Bourgeois by now had little interest in nature - apart from the meat of flesh and the animal fears of the family. Her work became increasingly autobiographical and drawn from painful memories of her childhood in France. Her work re-staged the most private and traumatic episodes of her life in such an unpalatable way that viewers often flinched away.
           

In 1993, she represented American at the Venice Biennale, and in 1999, she was the first artist to fill the vast Turbine hall in Tate Modern. Which she did with did with three vast observation towers that the viewer mounted via a curving stair at the top of which were seats winged by large parabolic mirrors. Adjacent to the towers and spanning the Turbine Bridge was huge thirty-five feet high Spider sculpture (Maman now outside the National Gallery of Canada in Ottawa) – looming over the viewer protectively or threateningly according to your view point. Of course, Bourgeois was only responsible for the drawing and planning of such vast sculptural works – assistants and foundries did most of the brute work – but unlike other artists of this approach – Bourgeois managed to infuse such ‘factory-made’ work with genuine magic.
           

I had seen her in interviews many times over the years and could not think seeing a more intimidating or sour looking woman in all my life (apart maybe from my mother when ill.) I was reminded of Kate Nash’s song Foundations: “You said, I must eat so many lemons, because I am so bitter. I said I’d rather be with your friends mate, because they are much fitter!” In fact, Bourgeois’ bitterness and black humour was refreshing in an art world full of namby-pamby, hippies - trying to commune with nature or the Earth Goddess.  Bourgeois like the brilliant Post-Feminist Camille Paglia – held no such Utopian notions of femininity – she was as terrified by the chthonian nightmare as by the patriarchal daydream. Paglia tellingly described in (Sexual Persona, 1990, P.5-6) Western Civilizations fear of the chthonian thus: “Sex cannot be understood because nature cannot be understood… The Dionysian is no picnic. It is the chthonian realities, which Apollo evades, the blind grinding of subterranean force, the long slow suck, the murk and ooze. It is the dehumanizing brutality of biology and geology, the Darwinian waste and bloodshed, the squalor and rot we must block from consciousness to retain our Apollonian integrity as persons.”
           

Perhaps in October 2007 - Brian Sewell was right when he wrote in The London Evening Standard: “Her work is enthusiastically exhibited only because she is, or pretends to be, a woman who hates men. This is political correctitude gone mad: the work of any male sculptor who did with female genitals what she has done with the penis would never see the light of day and, regarded as a psychopathic danger to society, nor would he.”
           

As a male artist of this kind of ilk – I could testify to the truth of his statement, but if the art world could grant the likes of Picasso, the right to his misogyny - then it had to grant Bourgeois the right to her misandry.
           

Personally, I believed art was an arena in which artists could battle with their demons - safe in the knowledge that the only detrimental effect on society – was offending a few narrow minded prudes. Even if Bourgeois did hate men (which I doubted) at least she had the courage and honesty - to let everyone into the anti-chamber of her fears. I did not believe that repression or lies could ever be a cure for mental instability – so the artist had a duty to express the unexpressed. In fact many women have feelings of hatred towards men and many men have feelings of hatred towards women – but what was more damaging to society I thought than these fears and prejudices – was their unspoken and unreflective promotion of acts of cruelty and injustice.