1. The artist Piero Manzoni sold cans of his own shit as
Today Manzoni's canned shit enjoys a place of honor in the prestigious Tate Art Museum in London. I've been unable to locate work by the eleven realists at the Tate, but today I'm displaying some of their work here on the equally prestigious IllustrationArt blog.
For a century modern artists prided themselves on being rebels against the establishment. There was post-impressionism, cubism, fauvism, futurism, surrealism, modernism, dadaism, orphism, expressionism, abstract expressionism, conceptual art, and pop art schools (quickly followed by op art, postmodernism, neo-expressionism, minimalism, color-field, graffiiti, installation, performance, earthworks and assorted other schools). Each one enjoyed their time in the headlines.
In an exhibition of paintings called “A Realist View” at the National Arts Club, the eleven questioned whether the new so-called freedom of modern art was an improvement. They wrote, “This freedom from obligation has resulted, very largely, in an impoverishment of the artist’s imagination, not an enrichment of it.”
The eleven artists were committed to realism but wanted to show that reality, when perceived through different eyes, could be very diverse and fertile.
Artist Burt Silverman worked with a psychologically insightful approach. Rather than try to spell out concepts directly with symbols and narratives, Silverman seemed to know, in the words of Auden, that
We have to regard the universe etsi deus non daretur: God must be a hidden deity, veiled by His creation.
Contrast Silverman's brand of realism with Harvey Dinnerstein's allegorical mural of the parade of his times:
It was painted in a sharply realistic yet fantastical style, very different from the work of the others.
Daniel Schwartz, another realist, explored bold colors and patterns in his work:
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"Epiphany" by Schwartz |
David Levine worked differently, with a powerful graphic style