Jan 25, 2012

CIA influence on the history of art, has got me thinking


Hacking away at large lumps of marble day in day out seems to provoke the mind to wander especially when you stumble over articles like this.

http://www.independent.co.uk/news/world/modern-art-was-cia-weapon-1578808.html

It kicks off with this, "For decades in art circles it was either a rumour or a joke, but now it is confirmed as a fact. The Central Intelligence Agency used American modern art - including the works of such artists as Jackson Pollock, Robert Motherwell, Willem de Kooning and Mark Rothko - as a weapon in the Cold War. In the manner of a Renaissance prince - except that it acted secretly - the CIA fostered and promoted American Abstract Expressionist painting around the world for more than 20 years."

No I'm not going to go along the lines of the stereotypical wowser shock, horror, outrage, but instead to accept that governments, the church and monarchies have manipulated the course of the history of art to suit their own ends since the year dot. It's just I hadn't thought how extensive it could have been in my life time and that's when my own alarm bells started ringing.

As a UK 60's art student I had first hand experience of the new artworld being completely besotted with all things American - American Modern Art was simply the coolest thing around so it was easy to promote, especially with unlimited US government backing. The most disturbing thing about the American model was that it was adversarial, not only did it promote itself but it backed it up with insidious criticisms of all other cultures and that's probably where the greatest manipulation occurred. Leaving us to wonder which non-American art or ideas suffered most from this approach.

Following this along we notice that initially the CIA promoted an art that was being made with no outside influence but some time in the 70's its not hard to notice that things started to change; the idea of fairness and politically correct issues crept in as desirable values in contemporary art - possibly with other government agencies becoming involved. Whether this was good or bad doesn't really matter but it flies in the face of any notion of supporting genuine artistic freedom. 

It would take some scholarship to unearth the effect of Australian government agencies on the history of Australian art but its not hard to see the pro-British Menzies era iron fist of William Dargie Arts control and the equally vigorous Whitlam Australia Council as prime candidates for history biasing precedents.

And I suspect that the practice of government interference has become so entrenched that we don't even notice it. 




Jan 2, 2012

Melbourne Prize - what next?


As the dust settles on 2011, and everything else in my studio for that matter!! I thought we should kick off the new year with a snapshot of what's causing the dust. Nicknamed big-i for the moment, it weighs in at about 3x as much as i-luru  (the largish sculpture in profile) doubtless this one will have a few kgs knocked off her before long!

Time to put reflecting about the Melbourne Prize and the state of contemporary Australian sculpture to one side and get on making it - have a great year - more as the 2012 evolves.