The Public Eye

Surrealism at LACMA, Gingrich to the Moon

by Edward Goldman | ArtTalk

Twenty years ago, when a huge, ambitious show at LACMA celebrated the Splendors of Thirty Centuries of Art in Mexico, something strange happened in the very last room of the exhibition, dedicated to the best Mexican painters of the 20th century. There they were, the great masters: Diego Rivera, Jose Clemente Orozco, and David Alfaro Siqueiros, famous for their politically charged, monumental murals. In the same room were a few modestly scaled canvases by Frida Kahlo, with her trademark unsettling, intimate, pain-inflicted images. So, here she was: one female artist versus three super-macho colleagues. And you know who won the battle? Yes, you guessed it right: Frida left the boys in the dust. Their paintings, now more than a half-century old, came off as political chest-beating while hers retained all its personal intensity and artistic relevance.

Now, in the new exhibition unveiled over the weekend at LACMA, Frida Kahlo is winning again, but this time it’s a much easier battle. She’s one of the fifty Surrealist artists from Mexico and the U.S., all of them women and most of them you’ve probably never heard of…for a good reason: their talent and originality simply is not up to Frida’s level. Though there are a few exceptions — Louise Bourgeois’ erotically charged sculpture, Lee Miller’s knockout photographs, and Dorothea Tanning’s whimsical paintings. Though it’s not Tanning’s paintings but her large, X-rated sculpture that stopped me in my tracks. I would cautiously describe it as the nasty, very nasty, sexual encounter between a full-scale couch and two naked creatures, alarmingly melting into each other. Enough said.

Taking into consideration all of the above, I wonder what Frida would say about the art of Ed Kienholz, whose early works are on display in a just-opened exhibition at L.A. Louver gallery. It’s interesting to see Ed Kienholz gradually abandoning abstract painting in favor of narrative, sculptural assemblage. And that’s where, ultimately, he hits the artistic jackpot, focusing his attention on the most provocative and painful political, social and racial issues of the day.

There is always something nefarious and upsetting about these sculptural assemblages, whether it’s stuffed toy bears climbing over the carcass of a TV set with an American flag inside, or baby dolls, one white with black pattern and another black with white pattern. Even half a century later, Ed Kienholz’s work delivers its powerful punches, knocking you off of your feet.

With Frida Kahlo and Ed Kienholz on my mind, and therefore plenty of Surrealism in the air, I wonder if Newt Gingrich — the endlessly fascinating political gladiator whom we seemingly cannot get enough of — if he took a lesson from Surrealist artists. How else can you explain his titillating promise to — if elected as president — build an American settlement on the moon with the prospect of turning it into the 51st state? Just in case he succeeds, I would like to send him in advance my resume for the privilege to serve as the Cultural Commissioner of this Surreal moonshine project of his.

Top image: Frida Kahlo, The Two Fridas, 1939, Oil on canvas. Collection of the Museo de Arte Moderno, Mexico City.

Re-posted with permission from ArtTalk.

Comments (2)

Elena Irving

February 5th, 2012 at 1:14 AM    


The exhibit "In Wonderland" has value as a psychological study of women expressing their own independent forces; drawing, painting and photographing with the courage to translate feelings that had only been expressed in the male dominated domain of Surrealism. In art that lasts the test of time, the artist's love, pain, fear, hopes and dreams are conveyed and transferred to the viewer, therefore the viewer in turn is a collaborator. In Surrealism where people and objects are often out of place and disconnected, one needs more patience to study a work to try to understand what the artist was feeling at the time of creation. Sometimes this fails, although it usually never fails in classic representational art such as Van Gogh's "Wheat Field With Crows'"; the broad almost uncontrolled strokes in a brilliant desolate field of yellow, the stark sky and ominous blackbirds, one can immediately feel the true power of grief, alienation and fear. In Picasso's "Guernica", the frightened horse, the light bulb, the carnage; here the artist's pain and horror at a wasteland created by war is suddenly revealed. No matter how many times I view these and other great representational works, the artist's emotions strike hard and penetrate in an instant. In this exhibit when Surrealism was intensified with the representational, such as Kahlo's portraits and Tanning's erotic sculpture, the art gives knockout thrills.

Leslie Tuchman

February 9th, 2012 at 7:22 PM    


Thanks for the review of the LACMA exhibit. As a student of Jack Grapes practicing the voice of Surrealism, I have seen the exhibit two times so far. It's not to be missed however docent tours are hard to come by. The book that goes with the exhibit is invaluable. As a psychotherapist I get concerned about how quick we are to analyze our surrealistic artists's work. A piece of my writing was analyzed in class and I thought………as the writer, that's not what I meant
Amazing to think that Dorthea Tanning just passed away Jan 31st 2012 at 101 years of age. The sculpture you have shown above as well as her other works were part of her costume design career. She became a poet at the age of 80. Always more to learn. Thanks for this compilation of community events!!!!!

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