Showing posts with label fame. Show all posts
Showing posts with label fame. Show all posts

14/03/2014

Damien Hirst: The Great Busisnessman 2008



Amidst the biggest unfolding financial crisis in a life-time – the worst since the Wall Street Crash of 1929 - Damien Hirst took the biggest gamble of his career. He decided to go above the commercial galleries and sell his work directly to buyers at an auction at Sothbeys on Bond Street in London - in a show entitled ‘Beautiful inside My Head Forever’. By taking his new work direct to auction he claimed he was cutting out the middlemen of the commercial galleries and dealers including his own The White Cube and Gagosian. Hirst portrayed himself as a liberator of artists from dealers. Yet at the auction many of the works were bought or bid up by Jay Jopling of The White Cube – which represented Hirst – yet another example of dealers and insiders manipulating the market for their own ends. Months after the auction rumours also emerged that some buyers had renegade on their purchases.                                                                                                                          
When I first saw Hirst’s work in 1990 - I was convinced of his amazing talent and promise. Yet by 1992, I had already begun to suspect Hirst of vulgar commercialism. I thought he should have won the Turner prize in 1992 – and I was enraged when (the now totally forgotten bore) Grenville Davie won it. I cheered when Hirst won the Turner prize in 1995. However, I felt that the Sensation exhibition in late 1997 - had finished of the yBa’s as creatively daring and challenging artists. With growing sickness I watched them go on to produce increasingly commercial, tacky, gaudy, grandiose, soulless and factory made art. They became pop-stars not artists, businessmen and women not creators, alcoholic networking whores not self-questioning interrogators of meaning. A damming indictment of Hirst to me was the utter forgettability of his actual art works. While first writing this piece on him I totally forgot I had seen his work three times in I.M.M.A in the mid to late 1990s. Yet I clearly remembered Jeff Koons when he was in similar shows.
               
For weeks approaching Hirst’s auction - I read reviews of the forthcoming auction. About 80% of the reviews were critical of Hirst’s inflated reputation - though nearly all agreed that Hirst would make a killing. I was praying that Hirst would fall flat on his feet. His special kind of egotism, megalomania and greed - I felt deserved a vicious stripping down.                                           

However my hopes were completely dashed. On the 15th and 16th of September 223 lots - paintings and sculptures by Hirst were auctioned to the highest bidder. Hirst sold £111 million pounds worth of art in the space of two days. After Sothbeys’ commission was paid – Hirst was able to personally pocket £95.7, (all of these figures come from reports in The Guardian, The Times, The Independent and The Telegraph published in September 2008.)                                                                                 

The sale set a new record for an entire auction devoted to one artist – beating a sale of Picasso’s works in 1993. Even I had to take my hat off to Hirst the master media manipulator and businessman who amid the carnage of Melt-Down Monday on the stock markets, the collapse of investment banks and doom-laden talk of recession – had timed his end of the boom sale perfectly. I also had to take my hat off to Frank Dunphy his North Dublin accountant who had masterminded many of Hirst’s coups including the Sothebys sale.                                                                                  

The centrepiece of the Sothebys auction was The Golden Calf, a cow in formaldehyde, with gold plated horns and hooves - in a gold plated tank. Like For The Love of God, it was a big money spit in the face - of art as an object of; pleasure, contemplation, critical thinking or liberation. I was reminded of Freud’s observations on the anal link between gold and faeces. It was emblematic of an art world reduced to meaningless media shock-tactics, uber-rich house decoration and vulgar assertions of vanity – both Hirst’s own and his supporters. It went for £10.3 - lower than its estimate – but sickening all the same.                                                                                                         

As critics like John Berger and Andrew Graham Dixon have pointed out, art in the 1500s, became something completely different from the pious reflections of primitives, the symbols of power and the tools of propaganda of earlier times - it also became a commodity and a source of pleasure in and of itself. Something to covet and contemplate, exchange and act as a new, super-commodity - as tradable as gold, silver, precious stones or spices.
             
Art was bought, sold and collected in the early years of modernism – but never on a significant scale. Before modernism, individual artists like Titian and Rubens had run huge studios, amassed vast personal fortunes - and counted amongst their friends - most of the nobility of Europe. Still these were largely exceptional cases.                                                                                                                                                                               
The modern ultra-commodification of art only really began in the 1960s – with artists like Andy Warhol and his ‘factory’ approach to art-making. He went on to influence artists of the following generation like Jeff Koons and Damien Hirst.    
            
Thus, commodification began to have an increasing impact on the nature of the work produced in the art world in the 1960s – either with an attempted seduction of the market as in Pop Art - or in a critical rejection of it – like in early forms of conceptual art in the 1970s.                                                
           
The public still admired tragic artists like van Gogh because they were thought to have had integrity and suffered for their art – however in the professional galleries it became the age of the ultra-commercial operator and Neo-Salon decorator.                                                                                                                        
In this new market place, art students straight out of collage were not given time to broaden and deepen their work – instead they were encouraged to come up quickly with a saleable, instantly recognizable gimmicks. Many artists were overnight sensations and then within three years totally forgotten. Success had to be achieved early and then quickly consolidated in museum retrospectives - before the new wave of art students had arrived on the scene. Hirst the businessman had survived all these trials of fashion and the market but as an artist he was dead in the water.
            
Personally, Hirst the artist had lost all significance for me in the late 1990s when he substituted artistic risk-taking and innovation for the mercenary production of ever larger, more gaudy and expensively made versions of his four main staples; animals in formaldehyde, spot paintings, butterfly collage/paintings and spin paintings. The great concept of Hirst was the ‘me-too’ concept. He simply rehashed old conceptual ideas in a more spectacular way.  Unlike Jeff Koons who had come before Hirst (and influenced him profoundly), Hirst failed to significantly develop and broaden his art. All he did was enlarge it to greedy and arrogant scales that almost made me sick with their waste of money and human labour.
             
Hirst constantly droned on about how interested he was in mortality, death and old-fashioned existential meaning. However all his fear of death had done was driven him to ‘immortalize’ himself in gold, diamonds, marble and through the dead bodies of countless poor animals. He was no Samuel Beckett – he was more like a drunk, clownish bore in a pub. When modern artists (I could not even be bothered to flatter him with the company of the old masters) like Picasso, Rothko and Warhol plunged into the depths of the human condition, the frailty of life, the fear of death, the loss of faith, the hope for meaning – they produced works of profound feeling and intellectual sophistication. They made work that repaid revisiting. Hirst achieved none of this - all he could offer was gimmicks made thumping brand logos.                                                                                

Before the Sothebys auction in 2008 it was Hirst’s sculpture For The Love of God (2007) - a diamond encrusted platinum cast of a human skull – that epitomized for me the vulgarizing of his and all contemporary art perfectly. With it Hirst played a trick so hackneyed it was taught within the first few weeks to first year Art Students. Take an object – and alter it through collage, or recasting in order to at least double its supposed meaning. Yet again all Hirst proved - was that he had too much money for his own good. After it ‘sold’ for £50 million in 2007 - it later transpired that Hirst had bought a third of the work himself. The other two thirds - were bought by an unknown investment company. There was nothing new in this – it only served to prove yet again how rigged the art market was. When For the Love of God - was hailed by many in the art world as the most important work of the year – I was left feeling revolted by the moral and intellectual bankruptcy of this age of surplus, greed and selfishness. The complete spinelessness of most of the newspaper, art magazine and media critics made me even sicker than Mr Hirst. He was just a con-man – but they were all suckers.                                                                                                                            
With sculptures like his diamond-incrusted skull in 2007 and the The Golden Calf – Hirst was having his cake and eating it.  He could pretend the works were a mocking commentary on the greed of the Noughties while at the same time acting like a gluttonous pig in its trough.                              

Hirst the businessman had become the only interesting thing about his career. He had a massive country house in Gloucestershire, houses in Mayfair London and in total Dunphy thought that Hirst owned up to 40 houses. Added to this was his collection of Modern art - which included works by Warhol, Bacon and many of his peers - which was valued at over £200 million. In early 2008 – The Sunday Times ‘Rich-List’ had put his value at over £200 million. After the auction he was estimated to be worth over £600 million – putting him up there with the top hundred-and-fifty richest people in Britain. Yet no one it seemed to really know for sure what Hirst’s true worth was - especially as it was so heavily based on the stability and astronomical rises in the art market.                           

While 99% of artists in the world (including myself) painted in their tiny homes or a small grotty studio – hand-making their own paintings, sculptures and installations - Hirst ran over five huge studios divided between London, Devon and Gloucestershire - staffed by 180 assistants. In a world, were everything had a price, it saddened me to think of these assistants committing creative suicide for the sake of about €20 an hour. Exactly what kind of skilled but servile artists and crafts people choose to work for the likes of Koons and Hirst baffled me. Art for me was about personal freedom not indentured servitude. He was reported to have produced over 4,000 works by 2008 – many of which were so expensive and dependent on technicians, factories, foundries and workers to make - that an artist like me had absolutely no chance of ever making even one of them. That is of course if I had been so vain - as to want to make them - which I did not. Hirst himself admitted that he had only ever painted five spot paintings himself. Because he said, "I couldn't be fucking arsed doing it.” Even describing his own efforts as "shite.” He went on to say: "They're shit compared to ... the best person who ever painted spots for me was Rachel. She's brilliant. Absolutely fucking brilliant. The best spot painting you can have by me is one painted by Rachel.” (Hirst, Damien and Burn, Gordon, On the Way to Work. London: Faber, 2001.) Personally, I would have felt ashamed and emasculated to think that others - employed for pay - could make my art better than me.                                                                    

As you can guess – I was bitter. However even if I had been granted the fortune Hirst had been given – I knew I would never had been so utterly crass and egotistical. For instance in 2004 - I had bought an animal hide on a stall in Madrid. It was a spur-of-the-moment buy - which I almost instantly, felt guilty making. In 2006, I collaged the skin into three self-portrait paintings – and that was the end to my use of animals for my own aesthetic glorification. As for assistants – I would have almost killed myself at the thought that my canvases - could have been claimed even fractionally by others.

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.

The Art of Failure: Chuck Connelly Not For Sale



On July 23ed 2008, Carol and I watched The Chuck Show on BBC4 (tilted The Art of Failure: Chuck Connelly Not For Sale when shown on HBO in America.) The documentary was a fly on the wall film about the once famous but then forgotten alcoholic painter Chuck Connelly. I had expected to fall in love with this guy and his work – he hit all my usual buttons. However even I was utterly revolted by his attitude. I understood his desperation to succeed but I could not fathom his spoilt-brat tantrums.  
                 
The Chuck Show claimed that he had not had a show in New York since the early 1990s – yet a quick check by me revealed at least two shows reviewed in The New York Times – a group show in 1999 and a solo show in 2002! So I would caution trust in the other statistics given in the documentary. In the 1980s he had exhibited with the influential New York dealer Annina Nosei. During the 1980s he sold over one million dollars worth of art, some of his canvases going for up to $50,000 – again according to the documentary. For a short time, he was talked of in the same breath as painters like Schnabel, Basquait, Haring and Fishel as the next great American painter.        

However, his social skills were awful and he managed to alienate most of his old dealers and collectors. In 1989, his paintings were featured in Martin Scorsese’s short film Life Lessons in the larger multi-director movie New York Stories. Nick Nolte played the role of a tortured artist and his tumultuous relationship with his assistant and artist girlfriend. In the scenes where Nolte painted it was Connelly in the close up’s that was actually painting. Meanwhile Scorsese was planning to introduce Connelly to his movie friends and dealers in L.A. Then when the film came out - Connelly rather than talking the film up - said in interview with The New York Post that it was “mundane” and “cliché”! Talk about shooting yourself in the head! Even I doubted I would have been so stupid, so thoughtless and so thankless as to slag off even a really bad Scorsese movie. Yes the film was a mediocre work in Scorsese’s oeuvre - however the painting scenes were some of the best I had ever seen on film.                                                                                                                                    

By the time of the HBO documentary, Connelly was living with his put-upon, young, meek wife and off the small sales (under $500) he made with his last patron and on eBay. He ranted and raved at the art world, shouted at his wife to get him beer and then sobbed in his drinks. By the end of the film he had managed to lose both his wife and his last patron. In many ways his story was reminiscent of mine. I too can remember sending in my ex-girlfriend to galleries with my work because I could not even say hello to those people. I too can remember being filled with hate and poison for the art world – but it was when I was in my late twenties not my early fifties! Like me he was self-obsessed. Like me, he was a painter through and through. Like me, he was an outcast. However unlike me he was a raging, threatening, and nasty alcoholic. Unlike me, he had learned nothing from his twenty years in the wilderness – not humility, not compassion and certainly not objective reasoning. He continued to paint – but in a drunken stupor – ranting and raving at the age of fifty-two. Carol stridently reassured me that I was nothing like Connelly.   
              
There was no doubt that Connelly had talent as a painter but he lacked any original ideas. The major subject of Connelly’s work was oil paint itself – which he piled on in thick slabs with the loaded brush. His pallet was dominated by dark browns, greys, blues, greens and blacks. He might have seen himself as an heir to van Gogh – and maybe he was in a very small way. However, his style also owed something to the murky Romantic paintings of Pinkham Ryder the gritty realism of Ash-Can School painters like John Slone, George Bellows and Robert Henri and the saucy bad-taste of Reginald Marsh. All-in-all, a very conservative and old-school set of influences. Unlike Schnabel, Chia, Clemente or Baselitz he had never come up with a trademark style or gimmick. His work promised but rarely delivered. Most of his paintings looked too much like other paintings by better artists both dead and alive. Yet occasionally he could pull-off a real gem of open-painting - full of gusto and style.                                                                                       

As a man, I found him pitiful, unpleasant and not talented or disciplined enough for the A-League game he sought to play so desperately.  One of the most telling things Connelly said in the documentary was: “First they tell you to be a rebel, then they tell you to kiss ass. They tell you to drink, then they tell you not to.” This heartfelt comment showed up the deceitful contradictions of art-world mythology – which often relied heavily on racy stories of artistic rebels (usually safely dead and rotting in the ground and thus with a totally materialized and commodifiable oeuvre) yet demanded utter subservience of all but the most influential, powerful and rich super stars. Sadly, for Connelly he had swallowed the public’s mythology of the tragic artist and failed to understand the real secret of artistic success – salesmanship, net-working and cunning promotion. Overall I found the documentary very instructive on the real-world, do’s-and-don’ts of the art world.