arman the collector - Paul Kasmin Gallery
Transcription
arman the collector - Paul Kasmin Gallery
A R M A N T H E C O L L E C TO R T H E A R T I S T’S C O L L E C T I O N O F A F R I C A N A R T A R M A N T H E C O L L E C TO R T H E A R T I S T’S C O L L E C T I O N O F A F R I C A N A R T The exceptional collection of African art assembled by Arman puts him at the heart of the history of 20th century modernist practice, that tradition of formalist innovation which shifted culture forever. Arman is an integral part of a lineage that includes everyone from Picasso and Picabia to Baselitz and Brancusi, a highly sophisticated club of connoisseurs whose innate understanding of the importance of African art was central to the radicality of their own work, whether in 1905 or 1955; these were pioneers all in a different way of making and seeing whose debt to African form was complex as it was ambiguous, even when acknowledged. But the case of Arman is even more intriguing than those standard paradigms of modernism-as-primitivism or modernist-as-visionary, specifically because African art was only one of his collections and only one of his areas of extraordinary expertise. Indeed Arman, who at a certain point maintained ten or more collections of equal importance in varied fields, including antique weapons and Japanese armor, even feared he might be better known as a fabled collector than artist. But for Arman the two were so deeply and irrevocably linked that on some level they were almost impossible to separate, the artist-as-collector and collector-as-artist operating as the sort of ultimate bricoleur or meta-objectivist. Arman was, after all, known as an ‘accumulator’, a gatherer of objects who understood the potency they possess when ranged together, who spent his career exploring the odd poetry, dramatic effect, generated by the repetition and accumulation of things, thus pushing their very thingness into an entirely new dimension. Arman ‘collected’ objects all his life; some of apparently little value and some of enormous expense, some shown individually, in his house or studio, and some displayed en masse in galleries and museums, objects of great historical importance and objects easily found in every hardware store, a vast range of things whose accumulation was seemingly hardwired into his aesthetic nature. And it is precisely the differences and similarities between all these objects, their gathering, display and dispersal, the intention behind their accumulation, which makes the work of Arman, in its widest sense, much more conceptually dense than it may at first appear. When all distinctions blur between the professional artist and the obsessive hoarder, between the scholar-expert and the practicing sculptor, between the aesthete and the practical studio workman, then the oeuvre itself becomes all the richer in its final complexity. Even if Arman may have wished to specify that his collections were separate from his own work, eventually it is really up to history to determine the boundaries of such complimentary creative activities, to possibly eventually understand the artist’s achievements in a far broader context and wider practice. For to try and ‘read’ Arman’s art from his life-work as a collector is not to diminish but to enhance his ultimate importance, suggesting a far larger corpus, a far more encompassing practice than has been so far mapped, a territory of dizzying perspective. Arman knew objects, he knew all about them, how to make them, to take them apart and retool them, to build and disassemble, how to order them in massed formation and how to give them the space to breathe, to gather and conversely grant them singular attention. This rare double-knowledge, the connoisseur’s expertise and the handyman’s innate sense of how something actually works, are welded together into Arman’s unique aesthetic. The broader history and scholastic micro-history of African art and modernism is a massive topic already with its own groaning library racks, its internal feuds, counter-theories and contested myths. There is also, it goes without saying, an entire canon devoted just to the collection of African art, its own relatively short history within the West, and specifically its relation to the collecting and promotion of ‘new’ forms of Western art. Indeed there have recently been several exemplary exhibitions dealing with this topic, whose excellence both aesthetic and academic set new standards. These included African Art, New York, and the Avant-Garde at the Metropolitan Museum, which pleasingly overlapped with L’invention des arts ‘primitifs’ at the Musée du Quai-Branly. Similar ambition is evinced by the planned forthcoming show devoted to the relationship between Surrealism and the ‘primitive’ arts to be hosted by the Arnaud Foundation in Lens, Switzerland. These exhibitions make clear the importance of specific figures, whether Alfred Stieglitz, André Breton or dealer-collector Charles Ratton, but they also enjoyably ploughed, once again, those still controversial issues which have long muddied this field. Of these one has received increasing attention due to larger global cases of tribal restitution and museological misinterpretation, namely the turning of an object of practical magic and supernatural veneration into a ‘work of art’ admired almost entirely for its formal qualities. Thus when Australian Aboriginal artifacts are removed from display because they were never originally to be seen by anyone other than a small initiated elite, or when Native American totems are restored to their own tribe, to be used again for specific ceremonies, the question is made moot once more as to whether it is possible to understand such objects outside of their culture. For even amongst the many artists who have admired and collected African art there has always been a lingering distinction between those primarily interested in their sculptural values and those who honor rather their ceremonial or even occult intentions. Arman had a comprehensive understanding and a deep reverence for both aspects of such objects and in his own work he achieved something entirely akin to the tribal sculptor; the transmutation of basic materials, a block of wood, a tube of paint, a bicycle wheel, some feathers, into something rich in associative power, with a potency, a ‘presence’ so much more than its constituent elements, that everyday magic of artmaking. Arman made his own ‘fetishes’ from the quotidian objects of modern life, granting them their own aura through transformation, a ‘fetish’ of the gallery, museum and market, worshiped in its own way for its redemption from reality. One could even compare the steady accumulation of nails upon the body of the African fetish, each hammered home with its own intention, with the accumulative esprit of Arman, in which every object becomes loaded with significance through the dense echo of repeated form, charged with an energy larger than its maker even. Arman understands what an object can do, what it can summon, whether by itself or in unanticipated juxtaposition with others, the psychic charge of heightened materiality that African art embodies. As André Breton wrote to Ratton in 1935, “one day I will have to elucidate what is and what isn’t surrealist in primitive art.” This was in the context of the ‘Surrealist Exhibition of Objects’ in which every sort of item was posed to speak to its neighbour, everything from what were termed “perturbed objects” to “found objects” and even plain “American objects.” Essentially what Breton was searching for was some common denomi- nator between these things, their “impact”, their ability to provoke an emotion. This belief in a deeper universality, a fundamental form akin to that Jungian notion of the ‘collective unconscious’ is similar to Arman’s own conviction that true creativity lies beyond all artificial barriers of race or state. “My dialogue with African art derives from the conviction that artistic creation arises from a common fund of humanity and that in the discovery of aesthetic solutions the making of masterpieces supersedes regions, cultures, and becomes part of the treasures from all places and all times of human creation.” Whilst Arman’s work, of which we may here consider his African collection a part, stands square in the high-modernist tradition, it could also be seen in the context of a more playful ‘post-modern’ practice, in which the archive, the list, the library, the ordering and categorization of knowledge becomes the art in itself. In fact the topic of the ‘archive and contemporary art’ might well rival ‘African art and modernism’ as a subject of widespread study and research, and the theme of countless symposiums and shows. Within such a framework someone like Warhol can be interpreted as the ultimate artist-archivist, a compulsive collector of the ephemera of existence, his ‘time-capsule’ boxes of daily objects as worthy of study as his actual paintings, a sort of supra-accumulation of history in the making, of everything and nothing. Another example might be the English artist Tom Phillips (like Arman one of the great nonspecialist experts on African art) who has created an obsessive archive of photographs of the same banal street over the decades whilst simultaneously building major collections of both African weights and vintage postcards. Such lifelong collectors, who are also erudite and sophisticated professional artists, propose a new sort of aesthetic territory between acts of ‘original’ creation and the cumulative impact of a massed assembly of similar ‘types,’ the very territory originally explored so memorably by Arman himself. This sort of practice, in which the gathering and presentation of other people’s objects, or even ideas, eventually becomes its own identifiable, authored work has come to the fore in recent years. In fact this year’s Venice Biennale celebrated precisely such a way of looking at the world, to quote the thesis of the main exhibition, The Encyclopedic Palace, “This process of associative thinking resembles today’s digital culture of hyperconnectivity. Catalogs, collections, and taxonomies form the basis of many works….” Such collections on display included beautiful stones gathered by Roger Caillois, endless rows of comic little sculp- tures molded by Fischli & Weiss and hundreds of rubber Mickey Mouse toys mounted on a wall by Vladimir Peric, who also provided a 3D wallpaper of used razor blades found in flea markets. Likewise the CzechoSlovak pavilion by Petra Feriancová was full of repeated-forms, whether a vast pile of old National Geographics or a whole wall of African tribal artifacts, cut off by an angled sheet of glass. There was also a large group of model houses made in reclusion by one Peter Fritz and later found in a junk shop by two artists, Croy & Elser who present these as their own work, just as Linda Nagler bought a thousand antique photographs of babies, arranging this cabinet-of-curiosities as her own art. Appropriately, there was even a hypnotic film by Ed Atkins which toured the private rooms of André Breton, focusing on his own collection of tribal artifacts and the psychological ramifications of this charged domestic space. Here at the Biennale was to be found not merely a distinct visual corollary to much of Arman’s art, including rooms that might even have passed for his own work, but further evidence that the act of collecting is increasingly treated within contemporary culture as its own form of creative expression, an extension and elaboration of the artistic impulse in its largest sense and scale. Within such a context one might imagine an ideal scenario where someone like Arman could exhibit his entire existence as a single gigantic work, his complete oeuvre, all of his endless collections, everything he had ever made or assembled or imagined, ranged through a sort of boundless museum, a private palace, an expansive world in itself. Impossible perhaps, to gather back every work he ever created, to recall them all from private collections, museums and institutions, parks and gardens all over the world, to reassemble the absolute totality of his vast creativity, and to bring this together with his manifold collections, from the smallest to the grandest, from matchbooks to monoliths, making clear the connections and contradictions of this fecund existence. Here at last the sheer range and depth of Arman’s engagement with the material world would be made apparent, blurring all previous distinctions between objects gathered for their formal beauty and those chosen precisely for their banality, between the precious and the pedestrian, the revered and the reviled, revealing how the artist’s own private alchemy could transform, as with the African totem, the simplest of things into the most potent of symbols. —Adrian Dannatt 1. Face Mask: likomba Makonde Tanzania Wood, teeth, fiber 24 x 10 x 9 inches with base 7 x 7 inch base The Makonde are a population of Bantu farmers that were able to remain isolated from practically all outside influences until Portuguese colonial troops occupied their territory in 1917. They currently reside on the plateaus of southern Tanzania and northern Mozambique, and are said to have originated from a region located to the south of Lake Nyassa. The likomba face mask is primarily seen in the Makonde of Tanzania, and is used during the secret rite of passage initiation where young boys are circumcised and take part in diverse dances, songs, tasks, traditions and customs. The boys wear the likomba (pl. makomba) face mask on their head, looking directly through the hole of the mouth; they also wear five large labric skirts, covering the body entirely so that one can barely see the fingers and toes, ensuring that their identity is never revealed. 3. Face Mask: ngo ntang Fang Gabon Wood, polychrome 25 x 8 x 12 inches The Fang tribe originated in a vast, multi village community in a large area comprised of south Cameroun, continental equatorial Guinea, and nearly the whole north of Gabon, on the right bank on the Ogowe River. The community is very dispersed, with groups of dwellings that most often include members of single family lineage, resulting in strict tribal rules of kinship and matrimonial exchanges. The ngo ntang masks are of ancient origin, with one or multiple flat, circular faces, decorated with kaolin (a soft white clay). Ngo ntang is translated to “the young white woman”, and is associated with certain mythical elements evoking beings from beyond. Formerly in the Tristan Tzara Collection. 2. Plank Mask: nwantantay Bwa Burkina Faso Wood 92½ x 15¾ x 10½ inches without base 93½ x 15¾ x 10½ inches with base 14 x 12 inch base The Bwa (or Bwaba) people are related linguistically and culturally to other Voltaic speakers in Mali and Burkina Faso, numbering over 300,000 in population. They are farmers who grow grain products, especially millet, sorghum and maize, as well as very large quantities of cotton since the colonial period post-French inscription in 1914. This nwantantay plank mask represents nature spirits that family elders encountered in the wilderness, with hopes that these spirits will watch over family members. The nwantantay masks are used by southern Bwa, also know as nyanegay, translated to “scarred Bwa”, because their faces and torsos are heavily scarred by patterns applied during tribe initiation rituals to represent moral code and religious laws. 4. Headcrest Mask Bamileke Cameroun Wood 38 x 14½ x 20 inches The name “Bamileke” serves as a generic designation for all the peoples of chiefdoms in the east of Cameroun, however the Bamileke tribe is specifically referring to the people in regions located in the southern plateau. There are over a million people distributed among sixty of the most important chiefdoms whose, according to custom, sole responsibility is to respect the traditions and to unreservedly subscribe to the dominant symbolism (the chief (or fo), the queens, the dignitaries, the councils and the secret societies). The headcrest masks are one of the major expressions of the secret societies, which must show their power, cohesion, and the force of the symbols in regular intervals. The masks are made with wood, although some are beaded and embroidered in fabric, and are made to represent anthropomorphic figures (most notably, masks of princes), zoomorphic figures (animals who’s strong symbolism is tied to the power of the chief and leaders of the secret societies), or sometimes a hybrid. 5. Face Mask Fang-Gaola Gabon Crest, inset brass, pigment, and fiber beard 16¾ x 8½ x 5 inches without beard 29¾ x 8½ x 5 inches with beard The Fang-Gaola tribe is located in the region of Lambaréné (Najolé), the capital of the political district Moyen-Ogooué in Gabon; it is based in the Central African Rainforest at the Ogooué River. Lambaréné is inhabited mainly by Bantu ethnic groups such as the Fang, Bapounou, Eshira, and Myéné. There are few Fang-Gaolo face mask specimens in museum collections, for several reasons: their existence was often kept secret, due to their association with important initiation rites; they were little collected during the ninetieth century by travelers through the region; and they were considered to be gross in form and satanic in significance, and therefore worth little attention. 7. Helmet Mask: bundu Mende Sierra Leone Wood 16½ x 9 x 10 inches 6. Helmet Mask: bundu Mende Sierra Leone Wood 13½ x 7 x 9½ inches The Mende tribe has lived in Liberia, Sierra Leone, and the coast of Guinea since the sixteenth or seventeenth century. They are a society that functions within the framework of a monarchy with exclusive political power held by those in leadership positions, as well as basing power on the allocation of land ownership by tribal elders. The bundu face masks are connected to rites of divination and healing. The Mende believe in a creator-god called Ngewo, whose representation in image form is strictly prohibited. 8. Helmet Mask: bundu Mende Sierra Leone Wood 15¾ x 9 x 11 inches 11. Maternity Figure Sakalava Madagascar Wood 37 x 6 x 6¾ inches Sakalava-Mende country extends along the west coast of Madagascar, in a region of forested savanna with a dry tropical climate. The Mende Kingdom, founded in the seventeenth century, began to get progressively larger after contact with the Europeans, who traded the tribe firearms to assist in their conquests; this territorial expansion was accomplished in five stages, which corresponds to the five kingdoms of the Mende dynasty. This maternity figure is carved from hazomalagny, a false camphor material that resists rotting and is not prone to termite attack. The woman is carrying an infant on her back, with the top of her head as the remaining base to symbolize one of the principle tasks of fetching the water from the river. 9. Helmet Mask: bundu Mende Sierra Leone Wood 16½ x 9 x 10½ inches 10. Bowl Figure: arugba Yoruba Nigeria Wood 34½ x 16½ x 15½ inches The Yoruba are a people of approximately 25 million individuals located in the southwest of Nigeria and the south of Benin; the name Yoruba is a general term for this large group, a name that was given to them by missionaries from the middle of the nineteenth century. Prior to this, the Yoruba referred to themselves by their different sub-group names. The arugba bowl figure represents a kneeling figure holding a ceremonial bowl on her head with her hands; arugba is translated to mean “(s)he who carries a bowl”. The arugba bowl may refer to rituals for Osun, a type of medicinal water, where initiates’ participating in the ritual collect water from the river using the bowl. 12. Power Figure: nkondi Kongo Wood, nails, mirror 27½ x 14 x 9½ inches The Kongo are present in three countries: The Democratic Republic of Congo, Angola, and the Congo Republic, occupying a region at the mouth of the Zaire River. When the Portuguese arrived in the fifteenth century, the Kongo population had already amassed a huge kingdom with a centralized power system, and the Kongo kings were among the first African converts to go to Europe to receive a “civilized” education from Christian missionaries. The nkondi (pl. minkondi) is a particular type of nkisi, a spirit from the world of the dead, and are usually anthropomorphic or zoomorphic sculptures spiked with nails, iron blades, and diverse knots, all symbolic of the pacts and promises exchanged between the nganga, the ritual specialist, and his client. When the contract has been concluded and the matter is resolved between the nganga and the client, the nail is removed from the sculpture, a sign that judgment has been delivered. 13. Fang Reliquary Guardian Head: byeri Fang-Betsi Gabon Wood 55 x 18½ x 6½ inches Fang groups, a multi-village community, are all people of the savanna in the eastern regions of mid-Cameroun and the confines of the Central African Republic. The 300 different meyong (clans) became people of the forest under various pressures of social or historical order from outside influences. The byeri sculpture is aimed to protect the Fang peoples from the deceased, as well as to aid matters of daily life. They also serve purpose in therapeutic rituals, and most importantly for the initiation for young males during the great so festival. 15. Mother and Child figurines Wood 16 x 7¾ x 8½ inches The Luba Empire is historically said to have originated from a migration led by the tyrant, Songye king Nikongolo. At one point the Luba peoples geographically, made up one of the most widespread kingdoms in Africa. 14. Janiform Figure Ijaw Nigeria Wood 80 x 14¾ x 12½ inches The Ijaw (also known as Ijo or Izon) are a collection of migrant fisherman indigenous mostly to the forest regions of the Bayelsa, Delta, and Rivers States within the Niger Delta in Nigeria; they were among the earliest settlers of the delta region. As maritime people, many Ijaws were employed in the merchant shipping sector in the early and mid-20th century, pre-Nigerian independence; with the introduction of oil and gas exploration in their territory, some Ijaw are currently employed within those respective industries. Such figures as this one, depicting a female kneeling or sitting with a bowl, are traditionally used in Luba culture during pregnancy to appeal to the spirits for good health. Neighbors seeing the figure in front of a woman’s hut will fill the bowl with ceremonial offerings to help her avoid hardship during pregnancy. 16. Bird: sejen Senufo Ivory Coast Wood 22 x 7 x 7 inches The Senufo are established across Mali, Ivory Coast, and Burkina Faso, with a population of approximately one and a half million people. They are constituted under matrilinear lineages, with villages operating under the authority of a chief that descends from their maternal side. Bird figures, such as this sejen, are one of the many art forms associated with the Senufo Poro, a society with the Senufo tribe of initiated men. Senufo bird figures refer to both physical and intellectual aspects of life, combined to assure the continuation of the tribe; these themes serve as moral instructions, referring the initiates’ to the wealth of knowledge embodied by the Poro society. 17. Face Mask: ngblo Baule Ivory Coast Wood 21 x 7½ x 8 inches Present day Baule represents a complex mixture of populations that have arisen to power over the course of centuries. The rituals that fall under the power of tribal elders highlight previous autochthonal relationships with neighboring ethnic groups such as Guru, Senufo, Taure, and Mwan. Ngblo is a generic term for masks that are created solely by men in the community; these masks are ritualistic and conserved in the Baule sacred forest. Ideally, when the mask is produced, the person that it evokes must hold it close and perform a ritual dance. 19. Helmet Mask: bundu Mende Sierra Leone Wood 19½ x 7½ x 14½ inches 18. Songye Bifwebe Mask Songye Democratic Republic of Congo Wood, white, brown and black pigment 29 3⁄8 x 10 x 12½ inches The Songye occupy a territory in the Democratic Republic of Congo, and are culturally and linguistically related to the Luba. They have never had a united kingdom endowed with one ruling monarch, however the Songye have chiefs who undergo a ritual investiture and must observe a series of prohibitions that endows them with a status on par to that of a sacred king. The bifwebe (pl. kifwebe) mask serves as one of the most powerful collaborators between reality and supernatural forces in the form of magic or sorcery in the bwadi bwa kifwebe society, which functions as the organ of control in the ruling elite. The kifwebe masks are claimed to exist in a place beyond the normal order of the universe. 20. Helmet Mask: bundu Mende Sierra Leone Wood 18 x 83⁄4 x 9 inches 21. Mask, Democratic Republic of Congo Wood, 20¾ x 14 x 12½ inches without base 22¼ x 14 x 12½ inches with base 93⁄8 x 91⁄8 inch base Pende Mask (Katundu Chiefdom), of the Yaka tribe, representing the chief (Fumu) at caricatured dances. 23. Bakota Janiform Reliquary Guardian Figure Copper and brass overlaid, with steel strips on one side 13½ x 25¼ x 4 inches without base 13½ x 29½ x 63⁄4 inches with base 7½ x 4½ inch base The Bakota or Kota are a network of related peoples occupying a vast zone bordering Congo and Gabon in present day Central Africa. The term Kota is a collective name, as each cultural group that occupies this region and is referred to as Kota, bears a more specific name. Kota reliquary figures are created for the worship of ancestors. Sculptures would have been installed atop a reliquary basket or box containing the remains of clan founders. 22. Figurine, Democratic Republic of Congo Wood, pigment, shells, beads. 28 x 6½ x 8½ inches without base 31½ x 6½ x 8½ inches with base 7¾ x 8 inch base Songe Power Figure, of angular proportions, with a horn at the top of the head, and the eyes inset with cowrie shells, the face covered with copper and brass tacks and the head with skin. N OV E M B E R 11, 2 013 – J A N U A R Y 11, 2 014 PAU L K AS M I N GA L L E R Y 2 9 3 T E N T H A V E N U E N E W YO R K N Y 10 0 01 T. 212 . 5 6 3 . 4 474 PA U L K AS M I N G A L L E R Y.C O M