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| April
2005 |
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Vol.24
No.3 |
| A
publication of the International Sculpture Center |
<Back to Contents page>
Tom Otterness: Public Art and the Civic Ideal
in the Postmodern Age
by Vince
Carducci
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Life
Underground, 2002. Bronze, multi-part work commissioned by MTA,
New York City. Photo: Patrick Cashin
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One
Sunday in late November near dusk, a family walks down Broadway toward
Lincoln Center on Manhattans Upper West Side. As they approach 65th
Street, the mother, a casually but stylishly dressed woman, says, Theres
a sculpture over here I dont quite understand, but I think its
hysterically funny. She leads the group to an L-shaped assembly
of bronzes in a broad plaza that divides the uptown, downtown, and cross-town
lanes of rushing traffic and also contains entrances to the 1 and 9 subway
lines. They gather around the sculptures various elements: a six-foot-long
squat rectangular pedestal on which sit a mouse, two dogs, and a bird;
a shorter two-tiered pedestal set perpendicular to the first, supporting
an owl on a perch on the upper level and a cat sitting on its haunches
on the lower; and a hound standing on its hind legs on the ground, facing
the cat. Dressed in a business suit, the hound holds one paw behind its
back and a sheaf of papers in the other. The entire vignette is rendered
in comic-book fashion.
The family discusses the work, trying to decide what its about.
The mother, a psychotherapist, recognizes a jury trial in progress. The
grown-up daughter, a medical librarian, looks intently for a moment. Its
the cat that swallowed the canary! she pronounces, pointing at the
accused on the witness stand, feathers sticking out of its mouth.
The
piece in question is Trial Scene (1997) by Tom Otterness. Its one
of 25 examples of the sculptors work, created between 1984 and 2004,
installed from Columbus Circle in Midtown to 168th Street in Washington
Heights as part of Tom Otterness on Broadway, a public art
project undertaken by the City of New York Parks and Recreation Department,
the Broadway Mall Association, and Marlborough Gallery, the artists
dealer. Originally scheduled to be on view during the fall of 2004, the
temporary exhibition was extended twice to run until the middle of March
2005 and will now travel to downtown Indianapolis from April 15 to July
31 of this year.
Catherine
Plumb and her daughter, Abigail Plumb-Larrick, essentially got
Trial Scene even if they werent aware of the fact that the sculpture
was inspired by the O.J. Simpson trial, which adds a layer of social commentary
to their interpretation. The illumination brought on by chance encounters
between artworks and ordinary people is generally held up as an ideal
of public art. And the 52-year-old Otterness is perhaps the quintessential
public artist for the postmodern age, a time when individuals are said
to be savvy to the come-ons of the culture industry and yet at the same
time skeptical of the purported authenticity of pure art.
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Trial
Scene, 1997. Bronze, 74 x 69 x 84 in. View of work installed
on 65th Street, New York.
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Born
in Wichita, Kansas, Otterness has been a player on the New York scene
for nearly three decades. In 1977, he helped found Collaborative Projects,
Inc. (Colab) as part of a group of then-emerging artists that included
Jenny Holzer and Kiki Smith. Colabs legendary 1980 Times Square
Show was mounted in a former bus depot
and massage parlor building found by Otterness and sculptor John Ahearn
at Seventh Avenue and 41st Street. (A cooperative endeavor, the exhibition
announced the entrepreneurial aspirations that inflated the art market
bubble that was to come, launching the careers of Jean-Michel Basquiat,
Keith Haring, and a host of other 1980s art stars.) He now works out of
an extensive studio complex in Brooklyn, two blocks from the East River.
One of Americas most prolific public artists, Otterness has created
outdoor sculptures for locations from coast to coast and throughout Europe;
hes also represented in numerous private and public collections.
His work blends high and low, cute and cutting. The combination of accessibility
and thoughtfulness, the melding of fine-art production and pop-culture
style, shows the influence of the Whitney Museum Independent Study Program,
which he entered in 1973. Like many artists who have come through the
program, Otterness walks the line between theory and practice, aesthetic
autonomy and political engagementalthough some might contend that
his inclinations have more in common with the worldly ambitions of fellow
ISP alumnus Julian Schnabel than with the critical aloofness of alumna
Andrea Fraser.
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Marriage
of Real Estate and Money, 1996. Bronze, 74 x 53 x 32 in. View
of work installed on 91st Street, New York. Photo: Adam Reich.
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Otternesss
aesthetic is best seen as a riff on capitalist realism. On the one hand,
it relates to the recognition by Gerhard Richter, Sigmar Polke, and Konrad
Lueg (who took up the term for an exhibition of paintings in 1963) of
the realities of the art market in which supposedly autonomous objects
of disinterested contemplation circulate as highly desirable commodities
to be bought and sold. But its also about what has come to be more
popularly understood by the term capitalist realism, the representations
of advertising and the media, following Michael Schudsons influential
1984 study, Advertising, the Uneasy Persuasion. Otternesss work
is a contemporary form of social (as opposed to socialist) realism, an
art of post-Cold War disenchantment, an expression of anxiety in the face
of global capital unbound.
This
is especially evident in works in which images of capitalist and proletarian
are dialectically intertwined. In Educating the Rich on Globe (1997),
a circle of worker-figures forms the pedestal supporting the earth, like
Atlas in Greek mythology. A top-hatted plutocrat in evening clothes lies
on his back on top of the world, coins falling from his pockets. Astride
his belly sits a woman reading a book. The sculpture visually presents
Karl Marxs base/superstructure analysis, with labor power constituting
the foundation on which the capitalist world rests; in turn, culture depends
on capital (what Clement Greenberg in Avant-Garde and Kitsch
calls the umbilical cord of gold) to provide respite from
the need for toil in order to be free to pursue higher endeavors
like literature and fine art. In Marriage of Real Estate and Money (1996),
a daisy-topped house dressed in a skirt stands next to a penny, which
holds a bowler in the crook of its arm. Its a portrait of a happy
couple, aristocracy and bourgeoisie in blissful dominion over land rents
and wage labor, the mechanisms for wresting control of the means of production
from the proletariat and the foundations of alienation under capitalism.
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Free
Money, 1999. Bronze, 36.25 x 27 x 20.75 in. View of work installed
on 107th Street, New York.
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Capitalist
realism is also present in Otternesss more sublimated work that
engages myths and other imagery in the public domain. Especially in recent
years, Otterness has explored traditional folk and modern mass-representational
forms as if to argue for a public sphere that is increasingly under siege
with the contested terrain of intellectual property in the wake of the
Digital Millennium Copyright Act of 1998 and the vertical integration
of the media and communications industries. The DMCA is referred to by
its critics as the Mickey Mouse law because its primary corporate
sponsor, The Walt Disney Company, wanted to extend the monopoly over its
cartoon character whose copyright protection was about to expire. Paradoxically,
Disney has secured tremendous revenues by converting folktales and myths
into marketable commodities with brand extensions that boggle the imagination,
fencing off vast regions of the collective memory for its own profit.
With works like Frog Prince (2001), Kindly Gepetto (2001), and The Lion
and the Mouse (2003), Otterness seems to take aimlike a hacker posting
a companys proprietary software code on-line for others to seeat
the enterprise whose own employees surreptitiously refer to as Mauschwitz.
(Indeed, a writer for Interview magazine once characterized Otternesss
work as being like Disney on crack.)
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Woman
with Token, from Life Underground, 2002. Bronze, multi-part
work commissioned by MTA, New York
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With
the fall of communism, the overthrow of capital seems like a dream destined
to remain unfulfilled. This disillusion has expressed itself in Postmodernist
art from the beginning in the recognition of cultural production as an
avenue of resistance in lieu of the transcendence no longer deemed possible
to attain. Following Renato Poggioli in The Theory of the Avant-Garde,
one option is undergroundism (as distinct from ivory
towerism), given literal and metaphorical expression by Otterness
in the sculpture cycle, Life Underground (2002), installed in the New
York City subway station at 14th Street and Eighth Avenue.
Life Underground consists of over 100 cast-bronze sculptures placed throughout
the platforms and stairways of the A, C, E, and L lines. The various groupings
read like panels of a comic book, the archetypical expressive medium of
mass-culture alienation. And like Fyodor Dostoyevskys novella Notes
from Underground, Otternesss cycle addresses the petty offenses
against authority perpetrated by the disaffected. Theres a fare
jumper crawling under a metal gate and a homeless woman being rousted
by the police. (These figures are well-dressed in sardonic reversal of
conventional social roles.) Otterness subtly invites deviant behavior
with a floor sculpture of two large feet cut off flat at the ankles, the
perfect platform for boom-boxes banned on the New York subway. Another
grouping shows two figures holding a crosscut saw, going after an I-beam
that holds up a stairway. The underground culture of urban legends takes
the form of one of the alligators rumored to populate the New York City
sewer system emerging from under a manhole cover to snag a small man with
a moneybag head.
This
quality of resistance, however, can also be read as a deconstructive moment,
the site of a play of meanings that can be read both positively and negatively.
What from one perspective is understood as resistance (i.e., the refusal
to submit to authority) may from another be seen as catharsis, the dramatic
release that gives vent to pent-up frustrations, the channeling of discontent
into socially acceptable mechanisms such as works of art. And artworks,
contentious though they may be, are still things to be possessed, part
of a system of rarefied commodities whose very existence is made possible
by the forces under critique. Thus, as with Dostoyevskys main character
in Notes from Underground, the reliability of Otternesss narrative
becomes an issue to be resolved. And along with this questioning comes
a consideration of public art in these postmodern times.
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Educating the Rich on Globe, 1997. Bronze, 62.5 x 35 x 37
in. View of work installed on 114th Street, New York.
Photo: © 2004 D. James Dee
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In Public
Sculpture and the Civic Ideal in New York City, 18901920, Michele
H. Bogart identifies the 19th-century fin-de-siècle as the moment
when public art first flourished on a broad level in America. John Massey
Rhind, Daniel Chester French, Frederick MacMonnies, and the National Sculptors
Society put artistic representation at the service of republican ideals
at a time of dramatic social change. Neoclassical allegories in monuments
and architectural ornamentation worked alongside Progressivist politics
and the City Beautiful movement to help assuage predominantly Anglo-American
middle- and upper-class anxieties over the seemingly imminent demise of
the American Way in the face of rising immigration and the chaos of urbanization.
While new immigrant groups also sought to mark their place in American
society through monuments to ethnic pride, the overall process was managed
from the top down, with gatekeepers such as the Municipal Art Society
in New York facilitating acceptable projects.
Ironically, self-referential Modernist sculpture first emerged in the
same period in Europe, as Rosalind Krauss notes, starting with Auguste
Rodin. Referring to nothing beyond itself, the nomadic work of Modernist
sculpture sometimes sits sphinx-like, to the bafflement of the average
passerby. In densely populated areas, the placeholder character
of much public sculpture reflects zoning ordinances that seek to free
street-level space from the shadows cast by skyscrapers towering above,
the creation of a vacuum that human nature abhors. As with the commissioned
sculpture of the Progressive Era, the process is still managed by gatekeepers,
typically the owners or developers of the real estate projects where the
work will ultimately reside. And those who control the use and flow of
space do so to suit their own interests and values. The potential for
conflict in this model is famously exemplified by Richard Serras
Tilted Arc (1981), which although it may have responded brilliantly to
its site on an aesthetic level, arguably failed to consider its function
on a social one.
Just like public art and Modernist sculpture at the end of the 19th century,
Postmodernist art emerged at another moment of dramatic social change:
the transition from industrial to informational society that began in
the late 1960s and early 70s. In this new environment, the civic
ideal, if it can be said to exist at all, has taken the form of crowd-pleasing
entertainment, the happy consciousness of spectacle society. The contemporary
cultural milieu requires that public art be nothing if not socially aware,
responsive to multiple constituencies.
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Large
Covered Wagon, 2004. Bronze, 85 x 185 x 48 in. View of work
installed on 147th Street, New York. Photo: Adam Reich
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The
accessibility of Otternesss comic-book illustrational style acknowledges
what Dave Beech and John Roberts term the specter of the aesthetic
(i.e., the philistine, who is uninformed not necessarily so much by personal
choice as by social circumstance) that permeates the ether surrounding
the public sphere; but Otternesss work doesnt condescend like
so much Postmodernist appropriation of popular culture seems to do. The
works complex, often subversive content also lends itself to more
reflective appreciation. In this way, Otterness integrates the realms
of popular culture and fine art, which in reality have always been united
by their alienated condition under capitalist rule. Their mutual alienation
is made all the more apparent by the works insertion into the public
domain. For although art is autonomous, something created in, of, and
for itself, its independence is bound by social determination. Freedom
from any purpose other than its own existence (the privileged position
atop capitals soft belly) comes at a price: art can speak the truth
but cant do anything about it. And with public art, this short-circuiting
of redemption is put on display for all to see, philistine and aesthete
alike.
Otterness demonstrates kinship with viewers of all stripes by using popular
forms of address to express distance from commonly recognized modes of
authority (including Modernist art conventions), acknowledging that in
the real world artist and audience inhabit the same unstable
environment. However, the nature of his sculpturethe sheer expense
of its construction, the maze of official channels that must be negotiated
to bring it to fruition as a public workrequires self-effacement
before the powers that be. This seeming contradiction makes it possible
for one critic to dub the artist a Coca-Cola communard, while
at the same time wealthy collectors lay down big bucks for limited-edition
bronzes like Marriage of Real Estate and Money. And while kids enjoyed
playing on Large Covered Wagon (2004), a lumbering representation of the
pioneer spirit pulled by a male ox, driven by a pipe-smoking woman, with
tussling siblings hanging out of the back, installed on 147th Street,
adults fretted about it as a sign of impending gentrification in their
Harlem neighborhood. Comfort and anxiety, submission and resistance are
the equivocal conditions of both popular culture and fine art in the postmodern
world, two sides of the same coin that add up to a dialectic. As Walter
Benjamin writes, There is no act of civilization that is not at
the same time an act of barbarism. Otterness may indeed be an unreliable
narrator, but in so being he speaks to our times.
Vince Carducci has written on art and culture for many publications.
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