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April 08, 2008 10:19 AM  (go back to main view)
I think this quote pretty much sums up most of Sam Durant's artwork...
The consequences of race riots and the counterculture movement are still being felt, but these works don't focus on the present. Instead, they evoke nostalgia for a revolution that was never fully realised and disappointment at the feebleness of today's political activism.

(From the Guardian, in a piece called "Art's Feeble Revolution," by Alexander Belenky, I don't agree with most of the artists the writer chose to pick on, but the thesis is pretty right on. Sam Durant, CalArts professor and local LA luminary, has been mining this idea for years. In my opinion, Durant's done only one good show (in fact it was really good which makes everything else look so bad), the monuments at Paula Cooper, everything else including his last show at Blum & Poe) was so didactic I feel I deserve a degree for suffering through it. For example a three page-single-space-ten-point-font press release (if you need a nap, here's the link) to tell us exactly how we're supposed to feel. Thanks Sam.

In the end I'm glad somebody started this trend and called it what it is, a feeble revolution. Purposeless nostalgia only highlight the inability of art to bring about social change.)
Blog Comments (2):
Posted by  on April 09, 2008 10:08 PM
I think that the idea that there is a correct way to do political art is a limiting concept. Further I think the writer of the Guardian piece has a very limited perspective of art in general and specifically of politics and art. Perhaps understanding that emotions are 90% of a political campaign (go Obama go!) and that loss, failure etc... like camp, may not be a literal language. Perhaps the issue might be not this "loser" art- but how fine arts writer's for major newspaper miss the profoundly affective language in some artwork looking nostalgically for familiar politilcal forms.
Posted by liberty on April 09, 2008 11:27 AM
i think you are totally correct~very insightful friend!!~
blessings~
liberty
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The Expanded Field is published by Andrew Berardini, a writer and sometimes editor from Los Angeles. He's written for Art Review, Artforum, Paper Monument, The Fillip Review, La Stampa, MOUSSE Italia, Afterall, and X-TRA, amongst others. He's taught at the Southern California Institute of Architecture and is currently editor for Check-In Architecture. He was the longtime Assistant Editor at Semiotext(e) Press, where he helped translate Jean Baudrillard's In The Shadow of the Silent Majority. He graduated from CalArts with an MFA in Writing from the School of Critical Studies. He can be contacted at andrew.berardini (at) gmail.com to perform at birthday parties, bar mitzvahs, and weddings.