(Norman Lewis - 1909 - 1979)
{{{click on images to enlarge them}}}
{{{click on images to enlarge them}}}
The first big problem for Norman Lewis was that most of
the Abstract Expressionist painters were drawing from their cultural capital as
white, male and middle class to purportedly create art which was ‘universal’ to
the human experience and which gainsaid the concept of gender, economic or
racial difference. At that time the white, male, middle class perspective was
dominant and taken for ‘universal’ – everybody was supposed to benefit from it
and get on board that train (and some black and women artists apparently even
tried to get on that train). It was Lewis’s goal, however, to draw upon his
experiences as an African American in situations of oppression to create his
pieces. His depth of insight coming from struggle and resistance was deeper
and, ironically, more universal than that of his buddies in the Abstract
Expressionist movement, but he was marginalized due to this orientation.
{{{Early figurative work}}}
Drawing from the black experience in America allowed for
a greater type of universalism than the type the white guys falsely asserted
that they, themselves, owned, but it relegated Lewis to nearly complete
irrelevance among the established and respected critics of the time. Indeed, he
is still referred to as, basically, the black guy who was doing Abstract
Expressionism when, in fact, the current retrospective show, ‘Procession: The
Art of Norman Lewis’, at Chicago’s Cultural Center, would seem to show that he
should never have even been characterized as an Abstract Expressionist in the
first place. Indeed, that Lewis was not an Abstract Expressionist seemed to be
the opinion shared by the curator of the show Ruth Fine in a comment she made
at the National Gallery of Art this year.
{{{Early attempt at abstraction - a Jazz Club}}}
The second big problem for Lewis
was that wealthy white folks who bought art would often buy what they ‘liked’
and not what had universal or humane meaning. Once, after I wrote a review of
an unrelated gallery show, the gallery owner emailed me and bluntly told me
that the people who buy pieces from his gallery do so primarily because they
like the colors in them. He prayed that potential buyers would not read my
review because they definitely would not buy pieces if they realized there were
controversial ideas in them. Some wealthy white guy wandering into the Willard
Gallery on the Upper East Side of Manhattan in the 1950s was probably not going
to buy a work that dealt with psychological responses to racial injustice or
which referenced the struggle for human rights or racial equality.
{{{Kandinsky-inspired work}}}
Indeed,
the range of content and themes in art has been severely limited, historically,
due to first the patronage and then the market system. The anticipated taste of
art buyers often determines what gets shown and then saved in museums. What the
(white, male, affluent) art buyer does not like does not often go very far –
this has been a limiting parameter throughout the history of art, especially
since the market system took over, and it hurt Lewis severely.
{{{American Totem}}}
The
third big problem for Lewis was that in much of his work he made no pretensions
to abstract art being a bifurcation from or radically divorced from
representational art. Abstract art, to Lewis, seemed to be a continuation or
further development of representational art just as, as an analogy, infrared
radiation is a continuation of the overall light spectrum. On occasion his
pieces seem to be completely non-representational, as in his overt imitations
of Kandinsky (seen in his piece ‘Fantasy’), his overtly geometrical pieces of
the late 40s which spoke through line and color, his attempts to mirror the
rhythms of music in some of his pieces or in his ‘Sea Change’ pieces. (Yet,
even in his ‘Sea Change’ paintings you see egg-like or placental images
intimating, perhaps, re-birth on a social scale.) That you could often see
figures and that the figures sometimes seemed to allude to Klan meetings or
cross-burnings or lynchings, again, supposedly limited the universalism that
the Abstract Expressionists falsely claimed as their accomplishment.
{{{Alabama}}}
The
most interesting experiment I came away with from ‘Procession’ was how Lewis
uses the repetition of human figures to create geometrical or organic shapes
against contrasting backgrounds. In ‘Double Cross’ we see an image that very
well could have been inspired by the phenomenon of cross-burnings with a thick,
blackened concentric grouping overlapping an intense fervid background. Figures
seem to be running toward the two crosses, creating greater and greater density
and overall darkness.
{{{Double Cross}}}
The power of hatred to awaken the worst in us, and to
link us to others as a greater and greater organic mass of blind emotion seems
to be implied (and is clearly applicable to a political and social phenomenon
which reared its head in the recent American presidential elections). ‘Alabama’
seems to work from the same principle of either a gathering or loosening of
social density, in this case the color white possibly representing the color of
Klan robes.
{{{Journey to an End}}}
‘Journey to an End’ uses a similar
technique as we seem to see one large Klan figure moving forward aggressively
in a violent gesture (perhaps throwing something – his arm bent back like the
common image of a baseball pitcher just before he brings the ball forward) who
is comprised of numerous smaller white figures marching, carrying flags and
walking with guns in lockstep.
{{{Ritual}}}
‘Ritual’,
on the other hand, presents a mass of smaller human figures in colorful,
African-inspired clothing, forming a crescent image below three ambiguous lines
against a background of rich and soothing blue. It is as if this group - formed
like a bowl or cupped hands - has come together to receive a blessing or higher
influence and the implication is that this must happen as a community – a gibe,
perhaps, against the lonely, alienated Abstract Expressionists who felt they
each spoke for and to humanity from their isolation and individuality.
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.