Larry Poons: Art isn t business

Similar documents
OXFORD. That s one of the first pieces of advice I got here. And it s true.

GAGOSIAN. Hans Ulrich Obrist. Katharina Grosse, Sarah Sze, and Hans Ulrich Obrist. Photo by: Julien Gremaud

SPERONE WESTWATER. 257 Bowery New York T F

A Second Mona Lisa? Science Offers Few Clues

Grace s Painful Pattern Repeated; See It? By Jesse Kohn

Custom Brushes. Custom Brushes make the trip a lot more enjoyable and help you make

Single mother of two creates $96,026 positive cashflow

Matt Mullen, The Playfully Troubled Art of Amy Sillman, Interview Magazine, January 25, 2018 AMY SILLMAN IN BROOKLYN, JANUARY 2018.

GAGOSIAN. Why Damien Hirst is seeing dots in his new work on view in Beverly Hills. Deborah Vankin

Junior Drawing Artist

OM I told you, I was a little embarrassed, you know, I have these problems like the relationship between foreground and background and...

Grade 7 - Visual Arts Term 4. Life Drawing

How Winslow Homer's long-lost camera changed the way scholars see his paintings

Letha Wilson Part I, Artists Space 1

All works must be 9x12 inches and matted 12x16 inches pm

What is the Law of Attraction?

ALLAN McCOLLUM. February 26, 1991, in SoHo

Devoting Oneself to Plein Air Later in Life

A MAKING A MARK GUIDE - SKETCHING BY KATHERINE TYRRELL

Pearly White. An interview with Clive Head by Rosalyn Best

Painter Deborah Kass looks back on her two-decade career

The Con Artist: A multimillion dollar art scam

ART by ROBERT INDIANA. WORDS by Bob Dylan. CREATIVE DIRECTOR: Michael McKenzie. BOOK DESIGN: A. Vessecchia and Kate Casey

APPENDICES. Table of The Speech functions analysis of and typical mood of clauses

DK: And we re going to a place where there s no market, so you can t touch us.

Art explained: How the internet changed the art world

Amaya Laucirica Album 2017 Lyrics

Transcript of John Chamberlain: Choices Exhibition Video John Chamberlain: Choices Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum February 24 May 13, 2012

Installation view, Peter Dreher: Day by Day, Good Day at Koenig & Clinton (all images courtesy Koenig & Clinton)

Visual Arts. Art criticism and art history 2001 HIGHER SCHOOL CERTIFICATE EXAMINATION. Total marks 50. General Instructions Reading time 5 minutes

STAUNING /Voic Templates to Non-Responsive Trade-In Prospects 2017 Edition

FIRST GRADE FIRST GRADE HIGH FREQUENCY WORDS FIRST 100 HIGH FREQUENCY WORDS FIRST 100

How to Be a Sought After In-Demand Expert Guest on Multiple Podcasts!

Activate! B1+ Extra Grammar Tests Test 2

ENW 318 Introduction

Call your Hal Leonard sales rep to work out a plan today! The Hal Leonard E-Z Order Line

Level 2. Intermediate. The Scream sells for record price at auction. Warmer

Authors: Uptegrove, Elizabeth B. Verified: Poprik, Brad Date Transcribed: 2003 Page: 1 of 7

Pissarro s People. Gallery Guide for Families

Eric Wert. 00 poetsandartists.com

Fred Herzog: Retro Refresh Equinox Project Space, Vancouver Jan 28 to Apr

DIANNA KOKOSZKA S. Local Expert Scripts

ackland-snow Frances Art is a powerful way to heal emotional pain and is a great outlet for

Although step-by-step plein air painting demonstrations

STAUNING Trade-In Internet Sales Process with /Voic Templates to Non-Responsive Prospects 2018 Edition

FRED WILLIAMS Silver and grey FRED WILLIAMS

John Baldessari In Conversation

THE ARTICLE Chimpanzee art up for sale BNE:

InstaStories: How to Use Instagram Stories to Elevate Your Business

It was late at night and Smartie the penguin was WIDE awake He was too excited to sleep because tomorrow was his birthday. He was really hoping to be

Challenge and Fun Badges For All Occasions Supporting Scouting and Guiding

By Liz Goins. High school is hard. But who am I to tell you that? You know that- we all know that. The

Image Manipulation Unit 34. Chantelle Bennett

Paul Cezanne - The Impressionist

QUICK VIEW: DETAILED VIEW:

Andronov, Nikolai In the Banya (Dyptich - self portrait with wife). Oil on board 100 x 50cm (each) Signed

Pictures are visual poems, the greatest of which are those that move us the way the photographer was moved when he clicked the shutter.

Session 3. WHOSE FUTURE GOAL 3: You will identify some of your own transition needs that are based on your preferences and interests.

INERTIA: STUDIO VISIT WITH NY BASED PAINTER LEIGH RUPLE AMY BOONE- MCCREESH MAY 4, 2017

Stephen Shore. Photo District News and- Mentors- St shtml

Kareem Rizk: Collage from Copenhagan

Portraits. Mona Lisa. Girl With a Pearl Earring

FEATURED PORTFOLIO CHRIS FRIEL

HOW TO SEE VALUES UNDERSTANDING THE MEAT AND POTATOES OF ART

FabJob. Become a Screenwriter GUIDE TO. by Angela Hynes

Trenton Doyle Hancock On 20 Years of His Fantastical Cartoon Drawings

Chazen Museum of Art Artist Jim Dine gives major gift to the Chazen

IELTS Listening Pick from a list

It was late at night and Smartie the penguin was WIDE awake He was too excited to sleep because tomorrow was his birthday. He was really hoping to be

ARTS AND MEDIA. Teacher s notes 1 BE AN ART CRITIC BE AN ARTIST

The Importance of Professional Editing

A FAMED LIFE a comedy for two women

In the City. Four one-act plays by Colorado playwrights

In Conversation: Mary Corse with Alex Bacon

STEVE JOBS: TOP 10 RULES OF SUCCESS

Judge A Book By Its Cover An Interview with Larry Rostant

PI Week 42 October 15 - October 21, Out Of The Blue A new live eight-part series celebrating the arts in Northern Ireland

Cambridge Discovery Readers. Ask Alice. Margaret Johnson. American English CEF. Cambridge University Press

6 Sources of Acting Career Information

The Accuracy of On-Line Information

Interview with Trespassers

As seen in the July 2010 issue of

Lesson 1. Word Quest 1

Gang Star Red (detail) (Courtesy of Todd Gray and Meliksetian Briggs)

I Let The Piece Tell Me What To Do

MS Learn Online Feature Presentation Healthy Living with MS: Fitting MS into Your Daily Life Special Guest: Clay Walker

Andronov, Nikolai By the Stove - Self-Portrait with Wife. Oil on board 130 x 80cm Inscribed on reverse

What I Learned ALEXANDER TUMALIP St. Francis. My name is Alexander Tumalip, spelled um A-L-E-X-A-N-D-E-R, and the last name is spelled T-U- M-A-L-I-P.

Modigliani s fake paintings make Indian artists speak up against art forgery

By photographer and photo dealer, Bruce Pottinger (Hon FAIPP AIPP), L&P Digital Photographic, Australia

And since you re that agent. This is that training. Let s get started.

Selling Your Artwork. By Emma Ralph Emma Ralph - All Rights Reserved.

Ouch Talk Show 12 th May 2017 bbc.co.uk/ouch/podcast Presented by Beth Rose and Helen Weaver. My Brain Injury Turned Me into a Teenager

So my plan was go to Decorah. Stop at an auction. Go to Harmony. Come back to Decorah and get the groceries and do the Wal-Mart run.

WATER AND THE LANDSCAPE 1

Year 7 Curriculum Overview Subject: Art

In the Thorny Questions of Authenticity, Who Decides?

Good morning, largest group of people I ve ever spoken in front of.

BURT GLINN: PHOTOGRAPHS OF THE NEW YORK BEAT SCENE. September 12 - October 12, 2018

Watch a Van Gogh Replica Painter in China Fulfill His Dream of Going to Europe to See the Real Thing

Transcription:

AiA Art News-service Larry Poons: Art isn t business The octogenarian painter stars in The Price of Everything, a new film about the machinations of the market airing on HBO GABRIELLA ANGELETI 11th November 2018 13:00 GMT Painter Larry Poons walking to his studio in The Price of Everything, directed by Nathaniel Kahn Courtesy of HBO Documentary Films

An artist walks through a snowbound landscape in upstate New York, on his way to toil in his woodshed studio. He spoons paint onto his palette with his hands before applying bright colours to a vast canvas. This is Larry Poons, the unlikely star of The Price of Everything, a new documentary film by Nathaniel Kahn exploring the grittiness of the contemporary art market. We see Poons preparing for a show of new paintings organised by the dealer Dennis Yares last year, but he is presented as the antithesis of art market superstars. On camera, Poons decries the market for preferring his old stuff and rails against the notion that the best artist is the most expensive artist. Poons has reason to be suspicious. After studying at the School of the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston from 1959, he moved to New York, where he gained immediate acclaim for his grid-based dot paintings. In 1963, he had his first solo exhibition at the Green Gallery and he was the youngest artist in The Responsive Eye, a survey of post-war American art at the Museum of Modern Art, New York, in 1965. But his art became more radical and although he continued to show his work in New York and it was still admired by critics, it proved less palatable for the market. Museums just want to play the latest hit songs In the film, the artist s perennially lyrical ideas around the purity of art, his physical connection with paint and his work s modest rise at auction in recent years provide a stark juxtaposition to scenes of market darlings like Jeff Koons, shown in his expansive New York studio while throngs of young assistants work round the clock to complete pieces that fetch millions despite being virtually untouched by the artist. The documentary, which premiered at the Sundance Film Festival earlier this year and began touring select North American cities in October, also features cameos by auctioneers, collectors, dealers and critics, along with other artists including Gerhard Richter and Njideka Akunyili Crosby.

Poons s acclaimed dot paintings include Imperfect Memento: To Ellen H. Johnson, 1965 (1965) Courtesy of the artist The Art Newspaper: You mention in the film that, when you stopped painting dots, your old friends stopped talking to you. What inspired your shift in style? Larry Poons: It depends on what you mean by inspiration. Painting in itself is self-generating. Everything affects us as long as we re alive and inspiration is a very catch-all, comic-book word. You re not the same person that you were when you were eight years old and learning arithmetic. It s impossible to stay the same unless you re catatonic. Much like Leonardo da Vinci said, a work of art is never finished, only abandoned. What s your process like? I never quite understand what people mean by process. What s your process like? You just sit down at your typewriter and start writing and one word follows another. What was Rembrandt s process like? He simply started. If you were describing a tooth extraction, there would be a series of steps required to take out the tooth, but there s no definite steps in painting. There s no process in painting that you can do that s wrong or right, so it s outside of the dimension of what we associate the word process with. There is no process except getting out of bed in the morning and feeling like painting and going to paint. The process is just painting.

Larry Poons was part of a group exhibition at New York s Museum of Modern Art in 1965, before his work became more radicalphoto: Jason Mandela, Courtesy: Loretta Howard Gallery How has the New York art world changed? I don t think it s ever changed: it s just much larger now but I don t mean larger in the sense of important. I ve been showing paintings steadily every year in New York since 1963 but people weren t always reading about me because my work wasn t Pop art: it wasn t the in thing for quite a while. I haven t been isolated from the art world, it s the art world that s been isolated from me. Museums just want to play the latest hit songs, and they stopped playing my songs for a while. What has been your experience dealing with the market? I m not a gallery owner or someone who buys paintings. I m a painter, so I don t deal with the market. Before there was an art market, there were people painting in their caves. People just looked at the pictures and didn t worry about what they meant or how much it cost.

How would you define success as an artist? Success is in the studio. That s the only success there is. The only other type of success is business: it s not art. There s nothing wrong with business and there s nothing wrong with art but they re two separate things. If you define success as being able to sell something to pay the rent, then that means you re successful at paying your rent. It doesn t mean that your art is any good or not. Do you have any advice for young artists? Make it as good as you can. The advice I sometimes give is to paint what you can paint. If you can t paint figures but you can paint rocks, then paint rocks. If you keep working at it, you re going to get better and better. As you go on, things that you could never do come about naturally. You ll find that things just happen. I think Allen Ginsberg once told a fellow writer, maybe Jack Kerouac, First thought, best thought, which is pretty much what I m saying. First colour, best colour. Next colour, next colour. Then, all of a sudden, you generate something new. The Price of Everything is shown on HBO on 12 November and in UK cinemas from 16 November