April 15, 2010

How must it feel to pimp for a slovenly whore, doped and ravaged and destroyed by her abductors, who was once the happiest, most innocent, most beautiful girl in town?

He is Baselitz, a name tuberose, not only acoustically, with dirty connotations. He is Germany’s foremost Modern artist. He is one of those who accepted the thirty pieces of silver and turned them into a heap of gold. He is a well-received guest at the London Royal Academy of Arts, which strikes you as odd since the Brits and the Krauts, never mind what they tell you in Brussels, regard each other warily. He is loved by the country’s foremost gazettes, like the FAZ, or the SZ, or the old pansy ZEIT. He can be found in Tate modern.

He owns a giant schnauzer with a degree in psychology who handles his castration complex, the foremost source of his creative inspiration. He produces his masterpieces watching Big Brother on TV while reclining on a sofa next to a canvas previously splattered with an undisclosed amount of colors on which he diverts an occasional glance and then arranges artistically by means of an Italian bread roll using his left hand only. Once dry, he signs it with his illustrious name, waits until that one is dry as well, and hangs it up upside-down. This, the upside-down, has made him famous.

Ever repentant Germany, foremost bastion of politically correct forces, where—rather en passant and widely unnoticed—book burnings and show trials have been reintroduced and hefty jail sentences are handed down to those who dare to insist on their constitutional rights and challenge the official credo, is an El Dorado for those in Modern art with the necessary connections. For the Baselitz”€™ meteoric ascent on the murky skies of Modern art, the usual machinations were set in motion. Among thousands of candidates, both academics or naturals, all waiting eagerly for a hint from the established Modern art mafia, now and then one is chosen. Since he is, just like his many contenders, about as gifted as a bedbug, nobody with a sane mind would assume that considerations of artistic merit ever played a part. What counts is a rigorous talent for self-representation, unfettered by the smallest grain of aesthetics or ethics, an inborn and unlimited vulgarity, and the stated objective to be the most ruthless Judas Iscariot to the Fine Arts that ever set foot on our sacred earth.

As to the operational level, it works more or less in the following way. One of the great Modern art dealers, a highly visible member of the aforementioned mafia, contacts a few of his highly invisible godfathers, strikes a deal, and the Baselitz (or anyone like him) is launched. Surprised by the sudden onslaught, goes the latter into high gear and produces twenty masterpieces a day, all of which fetch prices that increase breathtakingly fast. The press is informed, the usual dolls and pansies from the art section do their job, and tell the astonished aficionado in exalted crap-art parlance what it is all about, and a new star is born.

“Nearly the entire art establishment, including academies, the press, the art councils, and whatnot is controlled by a worldwide mafia with a rigorous codex that allows no dissent.”

Next he has the so far unheard-of idea to present his work hanging upside-down, a clear sign of sublime genius if there ever was one, and prices go through the roof. Retrospections in the artist’s honor are arranged, Modern art sanctuaries like the MoMA or Tate Modern buy his crap, even the occasional sausage-and-ham manufacturer is impressed and lays out a sack of ill-gotten money for a slice of Baselitz.

Now all this isn”€™t obviously any news and serves only to cast a quick glance at the antics of Modern-art-quislings who are either in direct league with the art mafia or have sold their souls, if not to the Devil, then at least to one of the mafia’s representatives. Which doesn”€™t make much of a difference in any case.

The antics in detail look like this:

Baselitz is perhaps best known for painting his motifs upside down as a strategy to free the subject matter from its content. —Royal Academy of Arts

The act of turning his paintings upside down endows them with instant drama.—The Times

Upside down is his way to liberate representation from content.—Gagosian Gallery

In his paintings he describes the chaos from which order might, or might not come.—National Galleries of Scotland
 
Baselitz”€™  main interest is the investigation of his emotional and artistic attitude towards his own work.—L. Ferrari

Baselitz”€™ new watercolors are the perception of time as a ray stationed on a linear axis supported by the notion of there being a fixed, infinite future.—David Nolan

Just a few examples of the most hilarious, dumbest, saddest travesty since the invention of letters. How is it humanly possible that an educated and intelligent person can write anything like this and still face him- or herself in a mirror?

If I remember well, it was Germaine Greer in her callous and so revealing clobber of Robert Hughes who is, with some reservations, one of the few vertical men in the art business. Smart money, she called it. New York real estate tycoons who laid out ten million greenbacks at a Sotheby’s auction for a rotting old shark. Put there in the first place by an abominable creep called Hirst. Well, we know by now how that money was made. In fact, we knew it all along, but until recently did not dare to call a spade a spade for fear of being labeled racists. As for the poor shark, one can only presume that it was dropped immediately after arrival into the Hudson River where it caused considerable stink before disintegrating completely. Because it is simply inconceivable that someone can be so absolutely barbarous and keep something so absolutely hideous in his living room. Or is it?

My son, if he stands a chance against the many Third-World competitors, will soon enter one of Europe’s more hallowed fine art academies. To avoid the Installations, Representations, Videolations, Fecalisations, all exhaustively underpinned by Marx, Gramsky, Adorno or Foucault, has he opted for Comics, with the possibility to develop a sound base in realistic drawing that might serve him well in case things get better and he decides one day to take up the torch. Not everybody is that lucky.

Take a young person who has absolved an academy, or studied history of arts, or journalism. So many dreams, so many high expectations! Then comes the crude reality, namely the realization that nearly the entire art establishment, including academies, the press, the art councils, and whatnot is controlled by a worldwide mafia with a rigorous codex that allows no dissent. Which leaves only two choices: to be upright and brave and turn the back on the whole pandemonium and face an uncertain future”€”or to join the Fifth Column, that veritable thorn in our side, and accept smart money, mountains of it. And become willing helpers for a band of cultural barbarians who seem to lack any access to beauty’s divine joy, and therefore hate it, and thus try to destroy what they can”€™t have.

If a present-day mammon acrobat can siphon billions from a given economy with impunity, it is an inspired guess that to him the hundred million bucks he lays out for one of Jackson Pollocks”€™ hogwash canvasses are only peanuts. The transaction, widely disseminated in the Wikipedia and similar agitprop annals as the highest price ever paid for a painting, is of course only another ruse to make us believe that hogwash art must necessarily be the logical continuation of our great Christian-European art, simply in view of the sum involved. A sum so astronomical and obscene that any hardworking citizen would need thousands of years to accumulate it. But it seems the ruse has backfired, even turned into an indictment. Because what once provoked only tired disgust, has now fired a cold anger.

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