Conversations with Tyler - David Salle on the Experience of Art
Episode Date: November 3, 2021When the audience for visual art expanded from small circles of artists and collectors into broader culture, the way art was experienced shifted from aesthetics to explanation. Art, it became thought,... should be about something. But David Salle rebukes this literal-mindedness: according to him, what we think and feel when reacting to a piece of art is more authoritative than what's written on the label next to it. A painter, sculptor, and filmmaker, David is also the author of How to See: Looking, Talking, and Thinking about Art, a highly regarded book on artistic criticism. David joined Tyler to discuss the fifteen (or so) functions of good art, why it's easier to write about money than art, what's gone wrong with art criticism today, how to cultivate good taste, the reasons museum curators tend to be risk-averse, the effect of modern artistic training on contemporary art, the evolution of Cézanne, how the centrality of photography is changing fine art, what makes some artists' retrospectives more compelling than others, the physical challenges of painting on a large scale, how artists view museums differently, how a painting goes wrong, where his paintings end up, what great collectors have in common, how artists collect art differently, why Frank O'Hara was so important to Alex Katz and himself, what he loves about the films of Preston Sturges, why The Sopranos is a model of artistic expression, how we should change intellectual property law for artists, the disappointing puritanism of the avant-garde, and more. Read a full transcript enhanced with helpful links, or watch the full video. Recorded August 18th, 2021 Other ways to connect Follow us on Twitter and Instagram Follow Tyler on Twitter Follow David on Twitter Email us: cowenconvos@mercatus.gmu.edu Subscribe at our newsletter page to have the latest Conversations with Tyler news sent straight to your inbox.
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Hello, everyone, and welcome back to Conversations with Tyler.
Today I'm honored to be sitting here with David Sally in David's studio out on Long Island.
I would describe really as a force of nature. He has spent most of his life creating art,
often as a painter, but not only, also sculpture, film. He directed a movie produced by Martin
Scorsese. David is perhaps best known for his rise to fame in the 1980s, where he heralded
the revival of a certain style of figurative painting. David is someone who is thought of as being
able to work in ballet and theater in virtually every genre and being able to integrate disparate
elements of the artistic craft, figure out how they work. He has also written a highly
regarded book of artistic criticism called How to See, is working on a memoir, has three shows
coming up this fall, and you can think of David as someone who has done virtually everything.
He has, in fact, also interviewed Scarlett Johansson. David, welcome. Thank you very much,
Tyler. I'm very happy to be here. Let me start with a few quotations from you, and I'll read them off,
and you tell me what you meant, okay? Here's the first one.
Quote, it sounds strident, but I feel my whole career represents my stand against, or an alternative to
literal-mindedness.
I think it's kind of true.
What does it mean?
It's certainly nothing particular to me, or rather not only to me.
However, I feel that, starting from when, I don't know, from the 50s or the 60s or 70s,
at a certain point, the experience of culture, whether it's a painting or something else,
The nature of the experience shifted to something that had more in common with journalism
than with what we might have called the quote-unquote an aesthetic experience,
that works of art were thought to be about something.
And what that about was or is is something that could be more or less easily grasped.
It's the aboutness, which for me is the kind of short circuiting of the art experience.
So when I say what I'm opposed to is or find myself in opposition to is
literal-mindedness, what I mean is just that. Let's not be so literal. Let's not take it so everything so
literally. Is there to be no metaphor? Is there to be no invention? What I meant in that statement is
essentially let's have more fun and let's use more imagination. Here's another quotation from you.
quote, well, a good work of art does about 15 things simultaneously when it hangs on the wall.
I think people might underestimate the decorative function of painting.
Painting has various functions. A good painting satisfies most of them or all of them
pretty much at a high level. One of the functions, historically, is to make the room look better,
to make people's emotional temperature quicken slightly when the paintings in the room as opposed
but it's not in the room. That's a decorative function, but it's an important one. I remember the first time
I met Jasper Johns, he actually said to a friend of mine who was standing with us that the first obligation
of a painting is to make the wall look better that it's hanging on. It is one of those statements that
is so simple-minded provokes mystification, but it's just a simple fact. What else does painting do?
Obviously, we wanted to do more than just be decorative. I think any good painting, I mean,
really good painting expresses something true about the time in which it was made and about the maker.
But that's another level and doesn't have to be apparent in the same way that it's decorative value
as apparent. What else does it do? It locates the maker in a certain history, a certain dialogues,
certain discourse. It sometimes takes sides. It sometimes provokes arguments. So these are other things
the paintings can do. Maybe 15 is a slight exaggeration. Here's another quote. It's, you
easier to write about money than to write about art. And I write about money. Well, I don't mean
to imply that writing about money is simple. But it's easier than your job. I'm sure it's
quite difficult. To do it well, it's difficult. There's a obvious problem in writing about art.
Art is visual. Language is language. When we write about literature or sociology or something
other than music, the medium with which we used to describe it is somehow aligned with the
experience of it in the first place. And with a painting or a sculpture, when I say painting,
I mean visual arts generally. There is always an approximation or translation that is challenging.
To do it well as challenging. What has gone wrong with art criticism today? And what is your
structural model for how and why that happened? Now, there's so many parts of the answer,
which are where to begin, part of what happened in art writing, part of what happened in
visual arts in America anyway, but also I think probably all over the West and maybe even all
over the world, is the expansion of the audience. At a certain point, artists decided, not that
anyone got together and voted, but kind of collectively, as a result of living through a certain time,
artists thought, wouldn't it be nice not to be put in the art ghetto, be kept in the art ghetto, but
to be inter into the broader culture, having more of a dialogue with the other arts, other more
popular arts, more even entertainment. We don't want to be kept below 10th Street anymore,
and they got their wish. I don't think anyone quite realized that achieving that was going to come
at a cost, and the cost was a dumbing down, a simplification, whether it's over or not, I don't know,
a matter of debate. The audience greatly expanded. The kind of awareness of the visual arts and
the general public expanded enormously. And with that, there was also a need for interlocutors and
interpreters, people who could explain the art to the audience. It was a growth industry for a while,
not so much anymore. A lot of people tried their hand, what in the past might have been a very,
very select group of people who had some intimate connection with the people they were writing about.
Increasingly, art writing just resembled journalism. As I say, it's reporting on this person's having
a show here, and this person's themes are X, and this person comes from this culture. There's a
catalog of either identity markers or subject matter markers or, in other words, which club
that artist belongs to, clubs. It's all fine, good, and probably necessary, but it's not
criticism and it's not thoughtful. Maybe it has a deleterious effect on the art experience itself
if we can use that term sense of grandiose to say it like that. So if I want to learn how to
read better, to learn about art and read about art, and if there's something wrong with art criticism
today. What is it that I best should do? Your own book aside, of course. When I wrote my book,
I took a page from another artist critic, a name Fairfield Porter. Fairfield Porter was a painter
who lived in Southampton. Made very high-level paintings in a realist, French realist tradition,
landscapes to life, whatnot. It was also a very serious critic, a serious reviewer and critic.
And Fairfield wrote one of his essays, that I'm paraphrasing, that one's immediate reaction to
work of art or not dissimilar to the way one reacts to meeting a new person. That is to say,
when you meet somebody when you know within a millisecond, whether that person is likely for you
or not, your course can be wrong and you can change your opinion. But we form first opinions,
first impressions. We meet people, and that's part of life, part of the discourse of life.
What Fairfoot was making was an analogy between that experience, which we all have every day,
or most days, and the visual art experience where we know what we feel about something usually,
but unlike meeting people, when we meet art, we don't trust that feeling. So we have to then go to
the wall label. The wall label tells us X, and then we get confused because the wall label doesn't
really describe what we think or feel about it. Maybe we'd think or feel nothing in particular.
Maybe we'd think or feel boredom. But we're told the painting is, so that we work about it's about
X. And if we're good students, we kind of commit that to memory and repeat that, and
pretty soon it becomes the thing that everybody says about that painting. It just simply may not
align with anyone's actual experience. So the very simple piece of advice, if that's even the
right word, simple procedure for people to simply ask themselves, what is it that you really
find yourself thinking about when you're looking at something? And the answer to that might in fact
be boredom or nothing or something unpleasant. And that's fine. There's plenty of other things
look at. Just move on. But I think without the ability to tell you,
the truth about it, what the experience feels like then we're stuck, then we have to manufacture
all these other criteria, which may or may not be true. I mean, they might be true. They might, in fact,
impact things in a meaningful way, but there's always the danger that those criteria are,
take on a life of their own, and they become a substitute for the experience rather than the
actual experience. Now, that being said, the experience can and probably will change, but as long as
one is alert to what that change is, that to me seems healthy and part of the process.
I don't know if that makes me sense.
Yes, but just to be very concrete, let's say someone asks you,
I want to take one actionable step tomorrow to learn more about art.
And they're a smart, highly educated person, but have not spent much time in the art world.
What should they actually do other than look at art?
On the reading level?
On the reading level?
Oh, God, that's hard.
I'll have to think about it.
I have to come back with an answer in a few minutes.
I'm not sure if there's anything concretely to do on the reading level.
I mean, there probably is, just not coming to mind.
Henry Geldzaller wrote a book very late in his life, at the end of his life.
I can't remember the title.
He addresses the problem of how, something which is almost a taboo.
How do you acquire taste, which is in sense what we're talking about?
Yeah.
It's something, one can't even speak about it in public society among our historians or our critics.
Taste is considered to be something not worth discussing.
It's simply we're all above that.
Taste is, in a sense, something has to do with Hallmark greeting cards, but it's not true.
Taste is what we have to work with. It's a way of describing a human experience.
Henry was the first curator of modern and contemporary art at the Metropolitan Museum in New York.
It's a wonderful guy and a wonderful raconteur. Henry basically answers your question,
the following ways. Start collecting. Okay, I don't have any money. How can I collect art?
We don't have to collect great paintings. Just go to the flea-mark.
and buy a vase for five bucks, bring it back to your room, live with it, and look at it.
Pretty soon, you'll start to make distinctions about it.
And eventually, if you're really paying attention to your own reactions, you'll use it up
and you'll give it to somebody else and you'll act with the flea market and you buy
another vase, slightly better vase, and you bring that home and live with that.
And so the process goes.
That's very real.
It's very concrete.
What is wrong with the incentives of museum curators?
The incentives.
So there's a structural problem there, which you can identify for us as UCFIT.
And where does that problem come from?
It's really interesting to even think about curator's work as being incentivized in the first place.
I think that's a brilliant formulation.
But they might be too risk averse, too conformist.
There's a lot of stories you could tell.
In this country, the curator's answer to the director, and the director answers to the board of directors.
So there's a lot of oversight, and there's a lot of people who have to be not pleased or mollified.
It's not so controlling, but however, nobody wants to make an unpopular show or make a show, which is controversial in a long way.
Controversial in the right way, it might have been good a while ago, but now any controversy so quickly shifts over into being the unwelcome kind, that it's definitely has made people more risk-averse.
Beyond the obvious aversion to that kind of risk, there are as many different kinds of curators as there are different kinds of artists, obviously.
and they have different intentions, different sensibilities.
But this problem, which we first started talking about in terms of how criticism has changed,
it all stems from trying to redefine the nature of the public art experience.
What is the experience the public is meant to have with art,
and what is it that we're trying to encourage them to have?
So the curators, in a way, caught in the middle of this dilemma that they're hired because
they're experts in something that have all done very diligent research and work and publishing
in various areas in which they're.
expert. They want to share their expertise with the art viewing public. That expertise may not be in a
particularly popular area. What are they meant to do? The shows in big museums, like the Museum of
and Modern Heart, for example, are usually planned five years ahead, at least, if not longer.
The amount of logistical effort and the amount of money required to produce a major show to a major
museum is daunting. So no one wants to make a mistake. That's not always a healthy situation.
to be in. It is a profession, and again, I'm not in it, so I'm talking about it, looking at
from the outside. I could be wrong. Profession that has encouraged or rewarded Mavericks very much.
There have been some. Walter Hobbs, was in one example. I was fortunate enough to have been
friends with him, and have worked with him a number of times. Walter had had his fearless view of what
constituted the 20th century art, and he was very comfortable communicating to people. But there have been
few and the way the curators are educated in the graduate schools and the way they're promoted
in the museums doesn't exactly encourage that kind of risk-taking. And I'm not sure it would
be rewarded in the art press if they did. But again, it's hypothetical.
Philosopher David Hume had suggested that the closest we could come to a final standard of
aesthetic quality was some notion of the test of time. What survives and is appreciated by future
generations. Do you agree? And if not, why not? It reminds me of the Wittgenstein dictum,
not that we're competing philosophers here, but the Wittgenstein dictum that for the meaning of
something considered its use. I think things can have things, meaning art objects,
art things can have short-term use, they can have long-term use. They can have use that comes
and goes, comes in and out of focus. They can be put to different uses in different times.
All of that seems natural and fine to me. And I'm not sure that there's one long-term test,
which all great works of art would pass,
or that's something that's so durable,
that doesn't change.
And again, test of time, according to whom?
Who's judging?
Who's the judge?
But say Angelic Kaufman,
who was much heralded in her lifetime in the 18th century,
is now considered a good painter,
but somewhat of a curiosity,
important for her role in getting women into the arts,
but not a great painter anymore.
That would be one example.
Should our default assumption be to trust these judgments of history?
No, I don't think so. I think one should make one's own judgment, and it might differ greatly from accepted opinion.
If you look, say, at the abstract expressionists and their reputations and what they did, what would be an example where you think the test of time is wrong?
So you've Pollock, you've Klein, you've Motherwell, right there, all have reputations.
Where has the test of time messed up there?
Which one's overrated or which one's underrated?
In your view, yeah.
I'm one of those people who is so deeply bought into the whole mythology of the abject expression's generation
that I don't find them overrated. I find them fundamental and central. I find them foundational
in 20th and 21st century painting. They're irreplaceable. And they are so for very specific
reasons having to do with an unrepeatable historical set of events that produced in these particular people,
some response that was unprecedented and long-lasting and for me still reverberating,
probably not.
So for other people, younger people, although who knows?
Collectively, there are times when artists collectively move the needle forward in a way
where it stays moved.
Now, there are people who came, let's say the people came right after that particular group,
what's called the second-generation abstract expressionists.
I mean, perhaps they didn't move the needle any further.
Maybe the needle couldn't go any further in that particular direction.
And those people now feel many of them were overrated in their time
or have simply faded into another kind of level.
But the people who really fuse baseline materials
and make out of that fusion something which is both unique to that person
and also addresses the broader aesthetic situation,
and also, one step further, opens the door for other people, those people are rare. And when it
happens, I don't think it's an accident that they rise, and I don't think it's something which
goes away. Now, as I said earlier, it might simply be of less use to this generation than to that
generation. But if you bother to look at what it actually is, how it was constituted, I think it can
come to life again.
As you know, the 17th century in European painting is a quite special time.
You have Velazquez, you've Rubin, you've Bregel, much, much more.
And there's so many talented painters today.
Why can they not paint in that style anymore?
Or can they?
What stops them?
Artists are trained in such a vastly different way than in the 17th, 18th, and even the
19th century.
We just don't have the training.
We're not trained in an apprentice guild situation where the apprentice.
starts very, very early in life, and the people who exhibit talent and drawing or painting
are moved on to the next level. Today, painters are trained in professional art schools.
People reach school at the normal age, 18, 20, 22, something in grad school. And then they're in a
big hurry. So if it's something you can't master or show proficiency in quickly, let's just drop it
and move on. There are other reasons as well, cultural reasons, for many years, for decades,
painting in, let's say, the style of Alaska's or even Salmanet, would have been the reason for it,
what would have been the motivation for it, even assuming that one could do it.
Modernism from whenever we date it from 1900 to 1990 was such a persuasive argument,
and such an inclusive and exciting and dynamic argument, that what possibly could have been
the reason to want to take a step back 200 years in history and paint like this and
an earlier painter.
But if you think modernism is now exhausted,
which is a plausible view at least,
and you need to go somewhere,
and you can't get any more abstract,
but still people don't go back very much, if at all.
No, I mean, I totally agree with you with your formulation,
but people are going back.
It's just not so easy.
The first time I saw John Cohen's work, for example.
Right.
There was a show that Moment did,
I think with Laura Hopman did the show,
John and who else,
maybe Elizabeth Payton,
maybe even at least you scavenge.
I can't remember.
There might have been three of them, a triple whammy.
First thing I thought when I saw John's painting is, oh, this guy owes nothing to modernism.
He just doesn't care.
It was my first awakening that there is a generation for whom it was really no big deal.
John had started out his career, making abstract paintings, very credible, very likable, abstract paintings,
but he clearly realized that he was the tail end of something and then at the beginning of something.
John's one of the few artists who had the talent and the skills who took the...
the time to acquire the skills to paint in a way which would have been out of the reach
from many other people. We're just at the beginning of that next phase. There might be people
paying like Velasquez the next decade. That's unlikely because the truth of it is there were
very few people in the 17th century who painted like Velasquez. There really is only one
Velasquez. There's really only one manet. There's really only one whoever you think is really
really one Pontormo. It's not that everybody in the 17th century or the
the 16th century was painting in a certain way,
there were always these exemplars.
And what allowed them to reach this other heights and a level
is very mysterious and powerful in the conversation.
But this, for a better word,
the academic style of painting is something which is hard to do alone.
It's part of a whole culture, a whole academy of looking,
a whole way of looking,
and setting up the studio and having certain kind of assistance
or kind of pigments,
and certain kind of tests of drawing and things that contributed to the look and feel of those paintings.
I mean, one could do it.
It would just take a tremendous effort of will, and then what exactly would be the point.
But I agree.
I mean, we think that, I think here's the point.
We think that art is like a menu in a Chinese restaurant for the artist.
The artist says, surveys the history of art and says, I'll have one of those and one of those.
I want to paint like Rembrandt in the morning and like Titian in the afternoon.
and then I want to paint like Georgia O'Keefe before I go to bed.
And it just, that's not the reality.
Reality is you're kind of stuck with what your own body can do,
your own aptitude and level of coordination and control.
It's more like athletics.
But athletes just seem to get better with time.
I tend to think there's something about urgency.
So to be, you know, Cizan or Velazquez,
there was something you had to feel was extremely urgent.
And it's simply impossible today to feel those same things as being urgent
because they're either taken care of or they're irrelevant
or they're not part of your society or politics, and other things feel urgent?
Yeah, no, I think that's true.
It is a matter of urgency.
But if you try to imagine being Cézan, what was painting like immediately preceding Cézanne,
if you look at Césin's early work, which basically answers the question,
I mean, we don't know exactly what allowed Cézan to break out of the dark, dewer,
brown, heavily outlined, agitated, congested paintings of his youth.
into the Cés-Alan that we all know,
that it didn't happen overnight.
It was long, slow, and probably torturous process
and something for which he was not immediately rewarded.
So it is always the individual plus the cultural and the technological,
you could say, the technology of painting in his lifetime was X.
He added Y to the X.
And part of that is unknowable because the secret resides with him.
It's interesting to think about what is it about the culture today
that's producing the art today,
think that's the question. Is it? That's what you're asking? Yes. So the rise of photography would
be one of many examples. Right. I think that's my answer was going to be. We're in a kind of
documentary mode. And I'm sure the rise of photography, not just rise, let's say, the deluge of photography.
And the centrality of it. The centrality of it has attributed to that. I mean, for sure,
I mean, this is in a way the most obvious thing of all. The artists we mentioned in the past
were able to do what they did because we didn't have cameras.
so they were required to document things in a way which is no one required of artists,
painters, but in general, we're in a mode, a cultural moment that favors the documentary
as a meaningful expression of our time. That would certainly not have been the case in 1950,
in 1940, 1960. Now, if I think of some painters, when I see their works altogether in the form
of a major retrospective, I enjoy them more and they make more sense to me. So we're
Lichtenstein or Jasper Jones would be examples. There were other great painters,
Cy Twombly, I saw a big retrospective of his work. I didn't like it less, but when I walked
out of it, I didn't feel especially enriched. You may disagree on who belongs to what category,
but what differentiates the artists who do much better when you see a retrospective of all
their work together? What's the extra thing you're learning or gaining? It's a very good question.
You can almost divide artists into two categories, the ones who constantly evolve.
constantly change, take on new challenges, even take on new identities, versus the ones who don't.
And I don't think the ones who don't are lesser necessarily, or that they're less good when they're good,
less profound when they're profound, less deeply pleasurable when you engage with their work.
But they're definitely less rewarding as retrospective material, because the work is more all of a piece,
or rather, I mean, everyone's work is all of a piece, all of a piece, all of a piece, just in terms of its,
surface attributes. So yes, I, having found his process, his way of picture making, varied in that
process less, say, than Jasper, certainly less than Roy. Even Roy clung to the black outline
throughout his entire career, and up until the very end, if he had lived longer, he would
have seen works where the outline itself was jettisoned, but that was the unifying principle
of all of his work. I mean, Jasper is a really fascinating example, and I think quite rare in that
early Jasper, is very different from work at the 70s, which is very different,
the 80s, 90s, et cetera, and yet it's unmistakable.
You see a painting by him from whatever date, it's unmistakably his.
But his concerns changed, his technique changed, his scale changed, certainly his subject
matter changed, the very idea of having subject matter changed.
So there's just quite a lot of movement.
And if it's coherent and consistent and graspable as the expression of one personality,
however diverse within that personality,
it's a very exhilarating experience to have.
It's also the curator.
A curator has to make the roadmap, which one can follow.
Now we're sitting here in your studio surrounded by your paintings.
You're a relatively prolific painter, always working.
What are the biggest just purely physical problems you encounter being a painter?
I like to paint at a certain scale.
These pictures they were looking at now, they're tall,
Some of them are 10 feet tall, 10 feet square.
Making a painting that size just requires a certain kind of physical energy,
from reach and stamina.
It's very different from making a 30-inch high portrait.
It becomes naturally to me that kind of physical engagement with the canvas at a certain scale.
It's something that I've always done.
I've always had that sense of scale in my work.
Other artists might have a completely different sense of scale.
But regardless, painting is a physical activity.
and it requires concentration, obviously mental concentration, but also just physical stamina.
It is, I've said this to other places, it is one of the things in life that you can get better at with age instead of worse,
but you do reach a point where the physical body is a limitation,
is how many hours a day you can work, how big you can work.
When you walk through a museum as an artist, how is it you do that differently?
You mean differently from someone who's not an artist?
Right, but someone who has some background.
in looking at the visual arts.
In my experience, artists are both more patient and more impatient
than the non-artist in a museum setting.
I am so impatient.
I do not want to linger in front of things that don't interest me.
I don't care who made them.
I don't care of what time period they were made in.
I don't care of the incredible backstory
of how that thing ended up in the museum.
It just couldn't interest me less.
I just want the visual hit of that adrenaline rush
of some visual piece of interior feeling, knowledge.
insight and without it I'm gone. When I find it, I can stay in front of painting for hours
long after people of sensibility long since we moved on. What do you think is the biggest
thing wrong with leading American museums today? I remember a conversation with Whitney Trustee
a long time ago, maybe 30 years ago. I can't remember what show we were talking about,
talking about the slate, the head schedule. And this guy said, oh, no, you have to understand
what we want is bodies through turnstiles. So, okay, that's what we want. Museum
need a great deal of money to operate.
Where does it come from?
It doesn't come from the government.
It comes from ticket sales and private individuals and corporations.
It's neither good or bad, just a fact of life.
How to make it better?
We were talking last night.
There are so many regional museums that serve specific populations.
And I agree with you.
I think do such a great job of giving access to visual experience of various eras and various types.
Anyone who just wanders in is going to get something out of it.
I'm a great fan and believer of museum culture and museums in whatever city I'm in,
form the backbone of my travel experience.
I'm sorry, what was the question of what's wrong with American museums?
What's wrong with them?
You know, looking at them as an economist, I see they put out maybe 5% or 10% of their collections
or sometimes even less, and that at least on the surface appears inefficient.
I understand why they hoard an endowment.
It's a signal to donors that they'll be reliable, that they won't sell the painting to
somewhere where it has a lesser value.
But it still seems to me that's wrong.
It has to be wrong.
to lock up so much wonderful, interesting output, more or less forever, right?
All museums have gotten caught up in European museums as well in the last 50 years is the building boom,
the architecture. Bonanza has been great for architects, where a museum has to claim kind of architectural
singularity to get press, to get attendance, to get donors. So much of the attention and the money
has gone into the making of the buildings. Some of them good, some of them not so good, many of them
not so good, but many of them, I think a fairly surprising degree, are not necessarily hospitable
places to look at art. They might be incredible examples of urban intervention or the building
arts, but they're not necessarily places that are particularly in congenial looking at,
certainly looking at paintings, maybe looking at other kinds of art, the other forms of art.
They could well be suited for that. I sometimes wish that less attention and less money went into
the creation of vast buildings and more, as you say, just showing off the collection.
We've all had been to those great museums in Europe, which are essentially repurposed industrial
buildings.
Right.
With very little in the way of amenities.
We just have great stuff you look at.
I'd like to see more of that.
When you make a bad painting, what is your best account of what it is that has gone wrong
in you?
That's a great question.
It's not like my hand slipped, right?
I fell off the ladder.
It may happen sometimes.
That happens, too.
There are so many ways a painting can fail, most of them disheartening.
Probably the most disheartening is when the whole pictorial conception was wrong.
I visualized this thing that was going to be so great.
And it's not that I didn't execute it properly.
I executed it properly and looked at it and realized concept was stupid or was insincere
or was involved in some way with something which wasn't true
and was elapsed in taste or was juvenile or something.
that's not fun.
The other thing that's not fun is maybe more honorable or less full of self-reproach,
at least the way I work.
Sometimes the picture is to reach a height depend on a gamble.
I'm placing a bet and a wager.
I put this thing next to that thing.
Magic's going to happen.
It's going to catch fire.
And I just know it.
I just know it.
Sometimes it doesn't work.
But at least I tried.
I tried something.
Okay, it didn't work.
Didn't pay off.
Get rid of it.
Those are two common paths to failure.
then there are other passive failure, which is truly embarrassing,
which is I just wasn't paying enough attention.
I thought that it was the right blue, but it wasn't the right blue.
And anyone paying attention would have known it wasn't the right blue.
That sounds so mundane, but that's probably more often the case.
If you could for us, please trace through the history of two of your paintings
that could be imaginary, so to speak, ideal types.
One is a very good painting that did very well and helped your reputation a lot.
And the other is a so-so or below-average David-Sally painting.
just trace like who buys them or where they end up give us the two hypothetical paths and how they differ
the really good painting you mean how does that go and it goes well for you how they differ in terms of
their journey in the world agnes scund buys it david geffin buys it and 16 years later it's donated to
moma like that would be a happy story right right so tell us the happy story you don't have to name names
and then tell us the less happy story hmm it's hard to do it without naming names but a prominent
collector of high renown would be fine.
There are so many delusions, self-delusions that are involved in being an artist, life of an
artist, I think probably most of which are necessary, especially when you're a young artist,
you have no right to think these things, I feel these things, or presume any of these things.
Sometimes you are encouraged by the people around you, dealers or collectors or other artists,
that these delusions maybe are legitimate.
I remember making a painting in the very early 80s.
I just thought it was a winner, and my dealer at the time was basically just told or she thought they wanted to hear.
So this is a painting we're reserving for museums, museum only.
And she even made a list of which museums would be likely.
No museum was interested in this painting.
No major collector was interested in this painting.
I can't remember what happened to the painting.
The painting went to some collector, then it went to auction, then went to some other collector,
it went to another auction.
I don't even know where it is today.
I'd be happy not to know where it is.
But this is a painting that at the time I thought, this is museum only.
and the artist might be the last to know.
There have been a few happy stories.
The happy stories are usually a result of a personal relationship with a collector or with a curator,
someone who has followed what you've been trying to do
and has been sympatheticly been trying to do and therefore is more attuned.
Their antenna is more attuned to when something is an opportunity.
There was one painting, actually a painting that you were looking at in the book earlier this morning
that was purchased by a very, very good collector in the West Coast.
It was a very good friend of mine.
Someone who's very generous with other museums and other artists.
The collector opened his collection to a curator from MoMA,
basically saying, take whatever you want.
So we felt sure that Peerter was going to take this painting,
which we had all kind of agreed at the time.
We reached this sort of level.
Guess what?
The curator didn't take that painting.
Took a much lesser painting.
We were baffled, but anyway, it's the curator's choice.
Then the painting, let's say the A painting,
used this horrible expression,
you know, kicked around for a while.
I was in some other collection.
It was shown in London a few times.
And then finally ended up in a very good collection in New York.
So this is the vagaries of commerce and taste.
Paintings are subjected to it or somehow tied, intimately tied with.
If you think of the really great collectors, Herbert and Dorothy Fogel,
the Meyerhoff, C. Lybrode, opinions may differ.
But what is it to you that they have in common as a class?
I'm not sure, Tyler.
I can think of what they have in common.
seem to me, and I would probably add a bunch of other names, it's hard to generalize about them,
for honestly. They seem so different one from another. I guess you could say the motivations are
similar. For some reason, this work speaks to them, and they have arranged their lives in such a way as to
be, to a certain extent, defined themselves defined by this body of work that they've created,
they've collected and created the work, they've created the context of the work. It's a kind of
transference,
producerial arrangement.
I mean, it's no accident.
I think that some of the most active collectors have been producers,
movie producers, theatrical producers.
There's a will toward making meaning.
There's a will toward wanting to say something about one's time and place.
That's all very interesting and very laudable.
Sometimes it's just greed.
They just love these things.
They don't want to part with them.
They don't want anyone else to have them.
They just want them.
That seems fine with me.
But most of the really great ones, I mean, the active ones.
sooner or later, maybe just have practical considerations,
have wanted to share that collection with the public,
which is, that's the kind of American system that we've evolved.
And how are artists different as collectors?
You have a collection of your own, right?
I do find artists collect more from an informational standpoint.
The artist owes nothing to the art world vis-à-vis their collection.
The artist isn't making a statement about the world.
world in their collection or is the artist judged by their collection. The collection is a really
private matter. It's more like a library. So, I know, for example, that my friend Jeff Coons
collects Corbe paintings, which I would, too, if I could afford them. I think that's great.
He doesn't collect art like his own. It collects art very, very different from his own. I collect
things that are very different from what I make. I don't actually live with my work in the house.
The way in which an artist uses another artist's work is sometimes very eccentric and hard to
trace, hard to see at first. I think artist's collections have more to do with wanting to be
reminded about something, wanting to be nudged by something, wanting to have something as a
touchstone, sometimes it has a spiritual component of Buddhist scholar rock or something of the
story. Sometimes it's something relatively insignificant. It's a reminder or a link to a whole
another world and other experience. Why is it that Frank O'Hara has been so important to both
you and Alex Katz. And Alex painted Frank, as you probably know, right? Frank was important to Alex,
for a number of reasons, the most important reason is that Alex is a great consumer of and connoisseur
of poetry generally, and New York School poetry in particular. They were contemporaries and friends.
So it's inconceivable that Alex wouldn't have been interested in or close to Frank O'Hara.
Unfortunately, I didn't get to meet Frank O'Hara, but I discovered his poetry when
I was a kid, it spoke to me for whatever reason. It's very easy, as poetry goes, to grasp.
And he continues to epitomize something about that time and place, the late 40s to the mid-60s,
late 60s, which still remains a touchstone and also still full of mystery and full of
sensibility. Let's say it's where one finds the roots of a certain sensibility, which for me
is still very much alive, maybe not for anybody else. He is the certain kind of painter's poet,
Parcenaise. He is the poet of nouns, poet of things, the poet of appearances, and the poet of
connections between things. I mean, in a way, he's the perfect poet. It's a list of names,
but it's more than a list of names. It's what happened at the party, but it's also about mortality.
It's about beauty, it's also about degradation, and it's very accessible and very, very,
musical. I don't think it's an accident. I think many painters.
Which is your favorite Preston Sturgis movie and why?
They're all so great. I think the one I've seen the most doesn't mean I think it's
necessarily the greatest, but what I've seen the most is the Lady Eve. I've seen it at least
20 times. I still laugh. I still cracks me up. I kind of think of Sturges, all five of the
great films, as one film. It's like one super long film, which just keeps playing in my head.
Hail the Conquering Hero is certainly the most complex and, in a way, almost painful.
It's psychologically painful.
And at the time it was made.
It was quite radical, though most viewers may not have seen that.
Yeah.
So, I mean, it's a great film.
It's a great achievement.
The crowd scenes.
The image of the town.
I mean, I love Sturge's depiction of a town, the life of a town.
These other films are centered on much smaller social groups.
This is Frank Capra film.
Maybe Sullivan's Travels is the most delicious.
I don't know.
That's my favorite.
The complex narrative of what art should be for,
which can be read in a number of different directions.
Yeah.
There's an obscure early one called The Sin of Harold Dittlbach.
You know that one?
No, I don't.
With Harold Lloyd.
Weird film.
It's a guy who works in a bank who's never had a drink in his life.
It finally gets laid off at the bank,
takes the money, his severance pay,
goes to a bar the first time in his life.
And then we see him the next morning.
having purchased a circus, she brings home.
He's living with his sister anyway.
Crazy Preston Sturgis plot.
No, Sturgis is fabulous.
He's something I think about a lot.
Why do you find the TV show?
The Sopranos so interesting.
Very much like the way I think about painting,
when I think about art in general.
What the Sopranos shows is someone who took the conventions of the day,
gangsters, mafia, cops,
and made out of it something which hadn't,
existed, psychological realism that had a texture, a most granular texture of life as it's lived,
so that people who have been, I mean, most of us have no encounters with the mafia, really.
We all imagined that we were part of the mafia, and we all imagined we all projected ourselves
into these families and social groups in which this mafia behavior was completely normalized.
David Chase made out of this convention something so psychologically dense, so much about the
family, the damage that families do to one another, the constraints of society versus the individual,
the stifling of imagination, that he managed to make out of this crime drama metaphors for almost
every dilemma in American society from the inability of the individual to be different, to be
survived, all these issues that we're now thinking of was commonplace, that he could locate them
inside of a weekly drama about crime family still seems to me to be miraculous and also
a model for what art can do or how it should think of itself, the engagement with certain
givens, and then who the hell knows where it's going to go after that.
How should we change intellectual property law for artists?
I am somewhat vague myself on what it even says now. There have been some cases. I'm not sure
or how they were settled or to what extent their landmarks.
But I do feel in terms of visual culture,
I mean, I've spent a good part of my career appropriating things that other people did.
You could say it's just wrong, it's theft,
and that would be, you know, certainly a position that would be hard to argue with.
My position is very different, that everything that exists exists in the present tense
and that everything can be material for someone else
without violating its original status,
and that one thing doesn't impinge on the other,
and that it doesn't need to be protected,
because if it's any good, it protects itself.
That's my view.
I don't know what the law says.
In my view, it's too hard to appropriate images,
whether in painting or in rap music,
or the difference between who can have the rights to a painting,
the rights to the photograph,
just seems too complicated.
I think there should be more open access.
To close, I'd like to offer three different statements from you,
as we started, and you can tell us what you meant by each one. Here's one, and I quote,
one of the principal cultural alliances is between the avant-garde and sexual libertinism, unquote.
I wish it were true. It seems as though the avant-garde is no more protected from puritanicalism
than in the other segment of society. I think I was wrong on that one. I think it was wishful thinking.
Here's another one from you, quote. It may surprise,
you, but my work is full of love.
Well, the second part's true.
The surprise part, obviously,
is it depends on who you ask on what day.
I wonder, and I don't know if it would be possible
to make a survey or who would give you an honest answer,
I wonder if every artist or whether how many artists
feel the use to which their work has been put in public
and the fact that it's been put to any use at all
is already a huge privilege and something that I'm grateful for
and I think everyone is grateful for.
However, if, I'm trying to be phrased it, if the gap between the way one's work has been perceived
and the way one perceives it oneself, how big is that gap?
Why is it so big?
Is the fact that it's a gap, it's a failure on the part of the artist, quite possibly?
That's certainly one way to read it.
Is it simply a matter of more time is necessary?
I like to think that's the answer, if I could be wrong.
Over time, the acid in the paintings gets dialed down or actually just leaks out.
And what's left is, I don't know if it's opposite is exactly right, but something very different.
Let's put this way, Tyler.
Making a painting, as you just said, even appropriating something is a lot of work.
Making a painting is a lot of work.
Making a painting that hangs together, holds together, the elements hold together.
The colors are in the right intervals and all the formal elements work and the subter elements work.
It's a hell of a lot of work.
to go to all that trouble, just to be a smart ass, it's kind of not worth it.
You have to have a little bit bigger game in mind.
So I think anyone makes a painting on it at any level is trying to communicate something
fairly complex and fairly involved with, for a better word, human emotions.
And that the, again, the language that returns us to our original question, the language that we use,
talk about these things, these things are cool, these things are hot.
I'm just not sure of any of that stuff, you know, means anything.
And the last question is the hypothetical one you posed to your former teacher, John Baldassari,
and I quote, which is better for an artist, to be loved or feared?
Yeah, well, I think to be loved is much better.
I've known artists who would choose the other option.
David Sally, thank you very much.
Thank you, Tyler.
Thanks for listening to Conversations with Tyler.
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