Kerry James Marshall on Charles White

36.2013
Black Pope (Sandwich Board Man), 1973 by Charles White

Painter Kerry James Marshall has written a wonderful appreciation of the artist Charles White. The piece also serves as a miniature artistic autobiography of Marshall himself, set against the backdrop of African-American history in the latter half of the 20th century. The piece, published in Charles White: A Retrospective (ed. Sarah Kelly Oehler and Esther Adler, 2018) is excerpted today in The Paris Review. Here’s the opening paragraph:

I have been a stalwart advocate for the legacy of Charles White. I have said it so often, it could go without saying. I have always believed that his work should be seen wherever great pictures are collected and made available to art-loving audiences. He is a true master of pictorial art, and nobody else has drawn the black body with more elegance and authority. No other artist has inspired my own devotion to a career in image making more than he did. I saw in his example the way to greatness. Yes. And because he looked like my uncles and my neighbors, his achievements seemed within my reach. The wisdom he dispensed to the many aspiring artists who gathered around him was always straightforward: do your work with skill and integrity, everything else is superfluous. It is a right time for him to be considered again in the fullness of his expertise. And fitting that he should be recognized with a survey in three of the best museums in the world.

Perhaps my favorite section of the piece is where Marshall situates White’s commitment to human representation:

Charlie himself remained steadfast in his commitment to representational art through all the shifts and changes in the contemporary art world of his era. He was not taken up in the rush toward abstraction and what the art historian Thomas McEvilley called the “misconceived belief that abstract art represented a kind of nothingness that made it seem the final term in a semantic series.” …

It was always clear with Charlie that to make good work, one had to know a thing or two about more than how to draw or paint. He had a scholar’s interest in history, which informed the work he made. He often said your work should be about things that mattered but reminded us all to concentrate on making the best drawings we could, adding, “the ideas will take care of themselves.”

Read the full essay at The Paris Review

ma-231767-web
Seed of Love, 1969 by Charles White

The Wedding Party (Birth of a Book) — Henry Koerner

139_01

The Wedding Party (Birth of a Book) by Henry Koerner (1915-1991)

The Fall of the Damned — Dieric Bouts

hell-1450

The Fall of the Damned, 1450 by Dieric Bouts (c. 1415–1475)

Screenshot 2018-05-30 at 12.21.51 PMScreenshot 2018-05-30 at 12.21.37 PMScreenshot 2018-05-30 at 12.21.17 PM

Portrait of Marguerite Van Mons — Théo van Rysselberghe

800px-thc3a9o_van_rysselberghe_-_portret_van_marguerite_van_mons

Portrait of Marguerite Van Mons, 1886 by Théo van Rysselberghe (1862-1926)

Lady Macbeth (Summer Film Log)

lady-macbeth-film

Spare, dark, cruel, and unflinching, Lady Macbeth (2016) uncoils with an austere beauty that belies its dark core. Set in rural England in 1865, the film is the story of Katherine, a young wife essentially imprisoned by her cruel father-in-law and warped husband who try to confine her inside their drafty country estate.

Katherine would rather take her freedom in the fresh chilly air of the heath, but father-in-law Boris wants her inside, preferably laboring at creating a male heir, a task made nearly impossible by her older husband Alexander’s apparent impotence. Boris and Alexander use a housemaid named Anna to monitor Katherine, and when the father and son have to depart on separate business matters, Anna is left to watch over the bored young bride.

06-lady-mackbeth-w710-h473

Katherine’s situation becomes much less boring when, only a day or two after the departure of Boris and Alexander, she discovers Anna naked in a sack suspended from the ceiling of a kennel, surrounded by jeering men. Katherine frees the maid and asserts her dominance as lady of the house, even as she has to tussle with one of the men, Sebastian. The scene is utterly Sadean, a strange mix of sexuality, violence, and the thin veneer of social mores that glosses over the id writhing under the surface. The veneer cracks. Our Lady takes up a poorly-hidden (and then not-really-hidden-at-all) affair with Sebastian. To reveal more could spoil the story, but, like, you know some of the stuff that happens in Macbeth, right? Murders and stuff?

While Lady Macbeth recalls Shakespeare’s tragedy at times, it’s actually an adaptation of Nikolai Leskov’s 1865 novella Lady Macbeth of the Mtsensk District. (I read and enjoyed an English translation by Richard Pevear and Larissa Volokhonsky a few years back). Director William Oldroyd and writer Alice Birch offer a fairly faithful adaptation of Leskov’s story, although the film’s tone is much darker and devoid of Leskov’s black humor. The film’s conclusion is also darker and more concise than Leskov’s novella’s last chapters (and better, I’d argue). Lady Macbeth’s final moments offer a chilling indictment of Victorian morality (a moral vision that continues to persist in many ways today) without the slightest concession to a mainstream audience’s desire for, say, justice. The film begins dark and strange and ends darker, stranger. Watching Lady Macbeth is a bit like having one’s stomach squeezed from the inside out.

The film’s disturbing tension is not for everyone, but those folks would miss a fantastic performance by Florence Pugh, who plays Katherine with a sensitivity that is both captivating and menacing. One of the great successes of Lady Macbeth is watching Pugh perform a character who moves from emotion to impulse to action–or in some cases radical inaction—in a thoroughly naturalistic way. Oldroyd’s direction is key here; perhaps the most terrifying thing about Lady Macbeth is how natural the film feels. Cinematographer Ari Wegner seems to shoot the film almost-entirely with natural light (and occasionally gaslight), an effect that is simultaneously gorgeous and starkly unsettling. Lady Macbeth would make a perfect double feature with Sofia Coppola’s The Beguiled (2017). The film’s repetitions of interiors—often with Katherine staring out—readily recall Danish painter Vilhelm Hammershøi’s work.

lady-macbeth7

Lady Macbeth creates its own visual grammar to tell its story, deploying dialogue between characters with a spare efficiency that helps build the film’s anxious mood. Extradiagetic sound is virtually nonexistent in the film, too. A slow ominous rumbling swells up exactly three times in Lady Macbeth, matching and then intensifying the viewer’s nervous dread. The final credits play out over the sounds of birds chattily chirping. It’s all very disconcerting.

As I’ve noted (and which I hope is clear from this write-up), Lady Macbeth’s mix of strange Sadean sex and violence isn’t for everyone. It’s the kind of film that will likely disappoint or even upset many viewers—those looking for a Victorian-period romance should look elsewhere, and fans of straightforward horror might not get the tropes they crave. But folks interested in an unnerving but compelling story told on its own aesthetic terms should check this one out.


How I watched it: On a big TV via a streaming service, somewhat late at night, at least for my wife and me. My wife loved it, by the way, and best of all, she loved it despite her usual rubric—she says she doesn’t like films where “nothing good happens.” Maybe something good happens in Lady Macbeth, but the good is so wrapped up in the bad that the two are impossible to parse.

The Well — Aron Wiesenfeld

bant37-aron_5

The Well by Aron Wiesenfeld (b. 1972)

Screenshot 2018-05-27 at 7.01.14 PMScreenshot 2018-05-27 at 7.00.50 PMScreenshot 2018-05-27 at 7.01.31 PM

 

Grandma’s Sunday Walk — Russell Drysdale

8650368-3x2-940x627

Grandma’s Sunday Walk, 1972 by Russell Drysdale (1912-1981)

Suspended Power — Charles Sheeler

sheeler

Suspended Power, 1939 by Charles Sheeler (1883 – 1965)

Mirror of Life — Henry Koerner

057bc_1403812657_koerner_mirror_of_life_lr

Mirror of Life, 1946 by Henry Koerner (1915-1991)

Amazon Books — Daniel Rich

b85e62a20f6434e8b003361c28b06df4

Amazon Books, 2013 by Daniel Rich (b. 1977)

The Dressmaker — Tony Luciani

6215752_orig

The Dressmaker by Tony Luciani (b. 1956)

From Hell (Bill Sienkiewicz)

img_0628

A page from Bill Sienkiewicz’s Stray Toasters #1 (Marvel/Epic, 1988)

Tata and Katia in the Mirror — Zinaida Serebriakova

Before the Singing — Antonio Donghi

before-the-singing-1930

Before the Singing, 1930 by Antonio Donghi (1897-1963)

Shipwreck — Carlo Maria Mariani

naufragio-2003large

Naufragio (Shipwreck), 2003 by Carlo Maria Mariani (b. 1931)

Big Whale — Mu Pan

dick_web

Big Whale, 2018 by Mu Pan (b. 1976)

Screenshot 2018-05-21 at 3.29.56 PM