beauty

MODERN ART: Auerbach versus Clemente by Laurence Fuller

MODERN ART chronicles a life-long rivalry between two mavericks of the London art world instigated by the rebellious art critic Peter Fuller, as he cuts his path from the swinging sixties through the collapse of modern art in Thatcher-era Britain, escalating to a crescendo that reveals the purpose of beauty and the preciousness of life. This Award Winning screenplay was adapted from Peter’s writings by his son.

In September 2020 MODERN ART won Best Adapted Screenplay at Burbank International Film Festival - an incredible honor to have Shane Black one of the most successful screenwriters of all time, present me with this award: 

As well as Best Screenplay Award at Bristol Independent Film Festival - 1st Place at Page Turner Screenplay Awards: Adaptation and selected to participate in ScreenCraft Drama, Script Summit, and Scriptation Showcase. These new wins add to our list of 25 competition placements so far this year, with the majority being Finalist or higher. See the full list here: MODERN ART

Auerbach versus Clemente

by Peter Fuller, 1984

If you too are sick of ‘bad painting’, you should have seen Frank Auerbach’s exhibition at Marlborough Gallery. (Auerbach does not exhibit frequently: this was his first one-man London show since the retrospective at the Hayward in 1978.) If you had done so, you would have seen some very good pictures indeed.

J.Y.M. Seated I, Frank Auerbach, 1981

J.Y.M. Seated I, Frank Auerbach, 1981

I especially enjoyed a head and two seated portraits of J.Y.M.; and a reclining head of Gerda Boehm who has modelled for Auerbach over many years. But there were many fine paintings, both portraits and landscapes based on familiar territory for this artist - Primrose Hill, Euston Steps and The Studios, where he works. Auerbach also offered a consummate series of drawings, mostly of heads, including those of the Arts Council’s Catherine Lampert, Charlotte Podro, Julia, and J.Y.M.

In ‘Fragments from a Conversation’, a gnomic interview pub­lished in a quarterly review, X, in 1959, Auerbach once explained that he had painted the same model as many as thirty times. (I wonder what the relevant figure would be today, almost a quarter of a century later. How many times can Auerbach now have painted, say, E.O.W., J.Y.M. or Gerda Boehm?) But Auerbach confessed that he got the courage ‘to do the improvisation’ only at the end. This improvisation he identified with ‘gaiety’, which he described as ‘a serious word’.

But what has been true of his relationship with individual sitters may be even more so of his project as a painter itself. Frank Auerbach was born in Berlin in 1931 and is thus still in his early fifties; I do not wish to suggest for one moment that he is near the end of his working life. He is, however, getting better as a painter all the time; and the strength of his recent work (so apparent in this exhibition) seems to have a great deal to do with qualities which derive from his increasing confidence in his own ability ‘to do the improvisation’.

J.Y.M. Seated II, Frank Auerbach

J.Y.M. Seated II, Frank Auerbach

This statement requires some explanation. Just a few years ago in an article in Art Monthly (reprinted in Beyond The Crisis in Art) I compared Auerbach and Kossoff. I argued that Auerbach’s work was manifesting a growing detachment from perceived objects and persons. At that time, I felt that Kossoff was superior to Auerbach, and I suggested that the qualitative distinction between the two might have something to do with this difference. I felt Auerbach was tending to pursue the sensual qualities of painting (as substance and process) in a way which meant that his pictures were becoming more and more severed from empirical response to the real world. I tried to relate this difference to certain biographical distinctions between the two painters. But, without seeking for one moment to diminish the high esteem in which I hold Kossoff’s work, I would like to emphasise the degree to which these marvellous new paintings by Auerbach show up certain fallacies in my previous line of reasoning.

For it is now clear to me that the ‘looseness’ (if that is an appropriate word) of Auerbach’s recent painting is not the result of any loss of the sense of real, beyond the world of painting itself. Indeed, Auerbach’s superb drawings - and what a draughtsman this man is - seem to me to be the proof of this. He is certainly drawing from the model better than ever before - and he was always among the best. (Look, for example, at the fine Head of Julia, of 1981, illustrated on the cover of the Marlborough catalogue.) Whatever is happening in Auerbach’s painting cannot be ascribed to any attempt to veil given reality before he has taught himself to see it clearly; Auerbach is not intent upon evasion, or the drowning of the appearances of the real in numbing illusions, or a curtain of subjective, expressionistic gestures. Rather, he seems less and less intimidated by the imping­ing facticity of the real (to use the sorts of words he understand­ably rejects as being too ‘windy’) only because he is more and more familiar with it.

If the outside world was once like a forbidding father with whom he had to wrestle, and ultimately to subdue, it has recently become more like the face of a well-loved friend with whom he can afford a reciprocal relationship. Auerbach has thoroughly confronted its otherness, scrutinised its physiognomy, and accurately observed its changing moods; because it is no longer intract­able to him, he has acquired the courage to take what some might mistake as cavalier liberties in his painting and drawing. Look how that brush-stroke seems urgently to be seeking not the twist of a particular lip, but itself! But, in Auerbach, these are signs not of incompetence, or some brash insensitivity, but rather of a true intimacy with both the visual world, and his own practice, painting.

Gerda Boehm, Frank Auerbach

Gerda Boehm, Frank Auerbach

Indeed, I think his willingness to improvise from a position of achieved mastery is edging his work from the good towards the great. For Auerbach is among the very best of our living British artists. Indeed, I know of only one other British painter alive today whose work is of comparable stature, and that is Kossoff. Beside Auerbach, Francis Bacon is simply an able caricaturist and sen­timentalist: the emotions Bacon wishes to evoke are all too rarely earned in the material handling of his forms and colours.

There are those who say that such distinctions are arbitrary and unimportant; that they reveal only the ‘taste’, or the arrogance, of those who make them; and that all such judgments are no more than the exercise of personal whim, or fancy. The case of Frank Auerbach, however, demonstrates why evaluation is so important in our response to works of art.

Auerbach has long enjoyed the admiration of a limited and discriminating circle of artists, critics, collectors and other viewers. His paintings have not lacked buyers. But, as I have argued before, he has rarely been allocated even a niche in ‘The Story of Modern Art’. (Not a mention, let alone a reproduction, in Lynton’s book of that name.) For reasons I have tried to analyze elsewhere, during the late 1950s, 1960s and early 1970s the art world was blind to the fact that in the late David Bomberg, Auerbach, Kossoff and Creffield Britain had artists every bit as good as, say, De Kooning, and incomparably better than all the fashionable rubbish brought to prominence through the successive vogues of Late Modernism.

But today this position is changing. In ‘A New Spirit in Paint­ing’, at the Royal Academy two years ago, Auerbach was ‘reha­bilitated’ as the precursor, or Old Master, of a new expressionistic movement. Even though Auerbach is at last getting the sort of exposure he deserves, this ‘rehabilitation’ is as distorting as the previous neglect. Let me explain. If you pick up any history of Pop Art, you will see on around page eight a reproduction of Edward Hopper’s painting, Gas: the text will imply that the importance of Hopper lies in the fact that, as an early painter of petrol pumps, he anticipated Pop. Or have a look at the catalogue for ‘The Art of the Real’ exhibition which introduced American Minimalism at the Tate in 1969. A Rothko is similarly reproduced as if his true significance lay in the fact that he precursed all those blank squares and dead cubes, all that insensible ephemera.

Now the fashions for Pop and Minimalism have mercifully gone the same way as wide lapels, no one except the art historians should need reminding that Hopper was opposed to the anaesthe­sia the Pop artists instigated; or that Rothko’s pursuit of a symbolism of pure forms and colours which could convey high sentiments had nothing in common with that trendy renunciation of illusion, emotion and material skill which characterised mini­malist anti-art.

Auerbach’s ‘relation’ to today’s ‘New Expressionism’ is equally fortuitous. It has been elaborated from the observation of trivial and contingent resemblances, which depend upon putting all substantive question of value in brackets. The relationship be­tween Hopper and Pop, Rothko and Minimalism, or Auerbach and the Transavantgarde is really no stronger than that between Piero della Francesca’s Nativity and a plastic madonna from Lourdes.

Plot 78 by Francesco Clemente

Plot 78 by Francesco Clemente

Some will undoubtedly want to know in what Auerbach’s superior quality resides, and how it is to be recognised. Aesthetic quality is not some figment constructed outside the work through discourse, ideology, interest or promotional opportunism. Rather, it is realised, or not, as the case may be, through material transformations of paint, canvas and pictorial conventions. The capacity to recognise it, however, appears to be rooted in a genetically variable ability for intuitive judgment and/or the cultivation of exceptional taste.

But painting, as Auerbach once said, is a ‘practical thing’, and ‘words are so windy’. Although we can never strike the ground and reveal the source of aesthetic quality in a way which places it beyond dispute, we can always indicate its necessary, if not sufficient, conditions in things more practical and substantial than verbal exhalations. I would, for example, emphasise here Au­erbach’s consummate mastery of drawing; his relatively recent flowering as a colourist capable of playing the full emotional range; the increasing sureness of touch, which has enabled him to shift from mere accretion of pigment to a vividly lyrical handling which loses nothing in sensuousness; and his evocation of the ‘Great Tradition’ of Rembrandt’s humanist painting, which he calls upon to redeem his expressionism from solipsistic sub­jectivity.

But the mastery of such material and technical elements, though seemingly essential, guarantees nothing. And I believe Auerbach to have been right when he spoke of the seriousness of those qualities (like painterly gaiety) which spring immediately from improvisation.

For, in the absence of a widely accepted iconography, the way in which such improvisation is elaborated becomes decisive. As you can currently see at the Royal Academy, a painter like Murillo could call upon the iconography of the Madonna, celestial utopias and flying putti as the means of changing his childhood yearnings into a present and socially comprehensible vision of a spiritually redolent world. But that transformation of the physically per­ceived which could once be made manifest by allegoric devices, like haloes and ‘human’ wings, can now only be realised through the transfiguration of formal means like drawing, colour and touch. And I think it is because his indubitable technical mastery has transcended itself and entered this arena of imaginative, and improvised, transfiguration that Auerbach is able to produce works of such exceptional quality.

This transfiguration, or what I have called elsewhere ‘redemp­tion through form’, is the hallmark of successful expressionism. It is something which Auerbach shares with Rouault (in his great paintings of Parisian whores) or Soutine (especially in the carcass of beef canvases.) However sour the subject matter they are presenting, or angst-ridden the emotions that inform their work, these painters know how to bring about an illusory aesthetic redemption, and to leave their viewers with a feeling of the ‘good’, through the way in which they improvise upon the formal means they have learned and mastered.

But today’s new expressionistic painters know nothing about this; they want to evoke their feelings, to allude to them, not really to express them at all. Go and look at Clemente at D’Offay’s, and the Whitechapel . . . and then return to Auerbach. Clemente has never looked at the world; at least, he has not yet seen it. He has no idea how a head meets the shoulders, a limb the torso, or a wall the ceiling. But nor can he have looked much at art. He is pictorially illiterate. He has not achieved competence, let alone mastery, in the necessary material skills of painting: he cannot draw; he has no sense of colour at all; his grasp of composition is weak; and he seems to have no virtuosity in the handling of his materials. Little wonder then that there is infinitely more of this magic of aesthetic transfiguration in a single drawing by Auerbach of Catherine Lampert’s head than in both Clemente’s bombastic series of daubings. Clemente cannot even come out fighting, let alone dance like a butterfly, or sting like a bee.

If we compare Auerbach to Clemente we can see revealed (as clearly as it is ever revealed) the palpable difference between work of potentially enduring stature and fashionable trash. Clemente has been elevated to his present cultural prominence on tides of fashion and interest (tendentious as well as financial). But Au­erbach is one of very few painters working in Europe or America today of whom it is possible to say with any degree of credibility that here, I believe, is a master in the making.

1983

MODERN ART: Spencer's Lost Paradise by Laurence Fuller

MODERN ART chronicles a life-long rivalry between two mavericks of the London art world instigated by the rebellious art critic Peter Fuller, as he cuts his path from the swinging sixties through the collapse of modern art in Thatcher-era Britain, escalating to a crescendo that reveals the purpose of beauty and the preciousness of life. This Award Winning screenplay was adapted from Peter’s writings by his son.

In September 2020 MODERN ART won Best Adapted Screenplay at Burbank International Film Festival - an incredible honor to have Shane Black one of the most successful screenwriters of all time, present me with this award: 

As well as Best Screenplay Award at Bristol Independent Film Festival - 1st Place at Page Turner Screenplay Awards: Adaptation and selected to participate in ScreenCraft Drama, Script Summit, and Scriptation Showcase. These new wins add to our list of 25 competition placements so far this year, with the majority being Finalist or higher. See the full list here: MODERN ART


Spencer's Lost Paradise

by Peter Fuller, 1980

Snt. Francis and The Birds, Stanley Spencer, 1935

Snt. Francis and The Birds, Stanley Spencer, 1935

As a child, I was sometimes taken to see the chapel Stanley Spencer covered with murals of the first world war at Burghclere in Berkshire. Spencer was admired within the Nonconformist milieu, within which I was brought up, as the last considerable religious artist. He impressed me deeply: I was fascinated by The resurrection of the soldiers on the east wall; there was something compellingly mundane about the way they rose from the ground amid mud and horses and handed in their white crosses to Christ.

Visiting his exhibition at the Royal Academy, I realized how deeply he is etched on my memory. This was not just the result of childhood impressionability. Although Spencer produced some atrocious works, this exhibition confirms that he was, at his best, a good, even a great, painter. But art teachers rarely recommend their students to look at him; art historians do not know what to say about him; and museum curators have no idea where to hang him. For a long time, his magnificent The Resurrection, Cookham was almost invisible in the darkness of a Tate stairway.

How are we to explain the Spencer phenomenon? He was born in Cookham in 1891, the seventh of eight children of the village music teacher. The family was intense, closed, talented and religiously fraught—father was church, mother chapel. Stanley and his younger brother, Gilbert (later also a painter), were educated by two elder sisters in a schoolroom behind the house. In 1907, Stanley attended art school in Maidenhead, where he drew from classical casts. In 1908, he went to the Slade where he was taught by Henry Tonks, who believed that the only basis of artistic expression was anatomical drawing.

His fellow-students nicknamed him ‘Cookham’ because he travelled up and down from the Berkshire village every day by train. Spencer’s early religious paintings, like The Nativity of 1912, and Zacharias and Elizabeth of 1914, are saturated with elements drawn from Cookham. They indicate how carefully he had been looking at early Renaissance painters, and they are compositionally impressive. But they also have the ring of expressive authenticity about them.

Speaking of these pictures, Spencer himself said in the 1940s that the religion which informed them was ‘utterly believed in.’ ‘Somehow religion was something to do with me, and I was to do with religion. It came into my vision quite naturally like the sky and rain.’ Religion was bound up with his continuing experience of his birthplacce, too. He once wrote: ‘I could see the richness that underlines the bible in Cookham in the hedges, in the yew trees.’

When Piero Della Francesca painted his Nativity (now in the National Gallery), he did so against the background of the Italian countryside. Through his compositional skills, he brought together his personal imagination, and his experience of the world as seen, and unified the two within a shared religious mythology. Few twentieth century painters have ever felt themselves to be in such a fortunate position. Until 1914, however, Spencer was.

The idyll was soon shattered. In old age, Spencer looked back on his early paintings. ‘Those pictures,’ he said, ‘have something that I have lost. When I left the Slade (in 1912), and went back to Cookham, I entered a kind of earthly paradise. Everything seemed fresh and to belong to the morning. My

Stanley Spencer, The Nativity, 1912, London University College ideas were beginning to unfold in fine order, when along comes the war and smashes everything.’ (Spencer enlisted with the Royal Army Medical Corps and served with field ambulances in Macedonia.) ‘When I came home, the divine sequence had gone. I just opened a shutter in my side and out rushed my pictures anyhow. Nothing was ever the same again.’

The first world war split Spencer’s imaginative life. None­theless, at first, this experience served only to enrich his work. Demobilized, he was commissioned to produce an official war painting. Travoys, of 1919, shows a dressing station during a battle in Macedonia. It is among the outstanding British paintings of our century.

Spencer saw the figures on stretchers ‘with the same veneration and awe as so many crucified Christs.’ Thus he found ‘a sense of peace in the middle of confusion,’ but one which is neither sentimental nor idealizing. The contrast between the picture’s calculated compositional serenity, and the searing tragedy it depicts evokes the sentiments of some of the finest Renaissance crucifixions.

Spencer produced other major works in the 1920s. But his greatest achievement of this, or any period was the Burghclere memorial chapel, which was commissioned to commemorate a dead officer and which he executed between 1927 and 1932. John Rothestein did not exaggerate when he contrasted it favourably with Matisse’s more famous chapel at Vence.

Nonetheless, there is a sudden falling off of Spencer’s creative powers after the completion of the chapel. In the beginning, the ‘earthly paradise’ of Cookham had, like all utopias, been elaborated out of transfigured elements of infantile, emotional experience, represented through religious pictorial conventions. Spencer tried to comprehend even the ‘negative utopia’ of war in these terms.

Significantly, he never engaged in ‘horrors of war’ painting. Burghclere shows ordinary soldiers doing everything but fighting, and rising from the dead rather than dying. The attempt to see war in terms of his ‘earthly paradise’ gave rise to his finest pictures. But the two would not truly fit, and he never successfully revived the idyll. Religion could no longer authentically mediate between his inner and outer worlds.

In 1932, after more than ten years’ absence, he moved back to Cookham. He painted many landscapes of the village, but there is about these works a deadening, sharp-focused literalism: Cookham is now clearly seen, but not felt. How different this glazed vision seems from when he looked lovingly on the same landscape for the elements of his early religious paintings. But Spencer was also seeking a mythology to fill the vacuum of his collapsed religious world-view. He thought he had found it in bodily relations between human beings.

You find hints of this in his continuing obsession with the resurrection, which began much earlier. Spencer never saw this as the coming of the cataclysmic spiritual Kingdom of God on earth, but rather as the collapse of the spiritual into the mundane. There is something resolutely common-or-garden about all those well-dressed village folk, popping out of their graves.

In the 1930s his view of religion became increasingly sexual. ‘The erotic side I am so drawn to really belongs to the very essence of religion,’ he once wrote. In 1935, he painted Love among the nations, in which utopia now becomes a kind of

Stanley Spencer, Travoys arrivingata dressing station, 1919, Imperial War Museum, London mutual masturbatory grappling between persons of all colours, races and creeds. ‘During the war,’ he commented concerning this picture, ‘when I contemplated the horror of my life, and the lives of those with me, I felt the only way to end the ghastly experience would be if everyone suddenly decided to indulge in every degree and form of sexual, carnal love, bestiality, anything you like to call it. These are the joyful inheritances of mankind.’

Spencer’s attempt to translate religious experience into human terms sounds promising. In fact, it proved a pictorial disaster. Love among the nations is hideous. Sunflower and dog worship (in which sexual activity is extended to contact with the animal and vegetable worlds) and Adoration of the old men (in which a group of infatuated male geriatrics wait to be felt- up by village girls) are even more grotesque. Few of his scenes celebratory of sexual encounters and conjugal life are much better. So what went wrong?

The answer is partly pictorial. Many pioneers of the modern movement discovered that profane illumination could be expressed through a certain kind of aesthetic experience, dependent upon the emotional symbolism of form itself—the handling of paint substances, colours and shapes in ways evocative of significant affective states. You find this in Cezanne, post-impressionism, Kandinsky, Mondrian, and some recent abstract painting. You can see something similar in pre-Renaissance art, and, significantly, in very early Spencer, too. His picture, John Donne arriving in heaven, was not out of place in Fry’s 1912 post-impressionist show.

But Spencer despised such techniques, when they were not linked to specifically religious imagery. Pictorially, he came to insist exclusively on anatomical expression. He could not even take impressionism, complaining of its ‘utter lack of spiritual grace.’

Spencer’s failure was as much to do with his personal as his aesthetic limitations. The reduction of religious experience into secular terms cannot be done through instinctual, sexual love alone. The life of adult human beings embraces a gamut of emotions, of which the explicitly sexual forms just a part. Spencer’s vision of transformed human relations becomes a travesty. In the midst of Love among the nations he appears, clothed, while two naked Negresses fondle him. Thus was the ‘earthly paradise’ reduced.

He himself was incapable of full relationships. He married Hilda Carline when he was thirty-three. In 1935, he began a series of perverse nudes of Patricia Preece, sometimes in­cluding a self-portrait. These are redolent with oppressive sexual tension, but without trace of feeling in touch, composi­tion or gesture. Hilda was divorced from Spencer in 1937, and he promptly married Preece. He invited his first wife to attend his honeymoon with his second, whereupon the latter (who was already established in an enduring lesbian relationship) accused him of adultery with the former, and declined to live with him.

He made repeated overtures to Hilda to remarry him; but she refused. He wrote her endless letters—some over 100 pages long—which were not inhibited by her death in 1950. Thus though Spencer celebrated good human relations as the realized essence of religion, he knew little about them. Even his affirmation of the sexual was born of frustration rather than fulfilment—and, in the paintings, this shows.

Perhaps not surprisingly, he often tried to revive his religious ‘world-view.’ Sometimes, in The Christ in the wildnerness series of 1939, or Southampton’s Resurrection, of 1947, he almost succeeded. But the repulsive, comic-book character of such works as The crucifixion of 1958 indicate only the desperateness with which he sought to invest the old mythology with meaning and feeling again.

The psychiatrist, Anthony Storr, has recently suggested that there is a special link between utopianism and sexual perversion. Both involve transfiguring the world according to one’s fantasies and wishes. When Spencer’s ‘earthly paradise’ collapsed, he failed to find a secular equivalent for it. Had he been a socialist, or even someone more sympathetic to modernist art, would he have fared any better? We cannot say. As it was, he lapsed into a chaos of perverse fantasy.

1980