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1965, Volume 170, 112115
Assemblage: The savage eye of Ed Kienholz
by John Coplans
The spirit of anti-art manifest in Dada
and never since completely absent from contemporary art derives from
a conception of the role of art which had been taking firm hold throughout
the 19th century. This conception presumes a discrete esthetic and
psychic distance that the work of art must maintain. It must aspire
to the nonfunctional, it must be a self-contained esthetic unity which
will be uplifting.
One of the reasons that assemblage was a studio-art
for so long, rather than a collector's art, was because in its very
nature it violated all the propositions of this conception. As such,
it can be seen as the natural vehicle for that aspect of the antiart
spirit which is directed at just this view of art.
Kienholz captured
An actual chair, instead of a painted chair, already breaks the
discrete velvet cord between artist and viewer. A large, ugly medicine
ball stuck in the middle of the seat becomes downright offensive,
and the irritatingly vulgar title I'm Not a Fig-Plucker, Nora
Fig-Plucker's Son, but I'll Pluck Your Figs 'Til a Fig- Plucker
Comes takes us completely out of the realm of art. Perhaps even
more than Rauschenberg, who seems incapable of ever eliminating
the patina of elegance from even his most raucous work, Kienholz
has made the 'inconvenient work of art' his very own.
Kienholz extends this type of dislocation of the object even further
in scale in his series of tableaux. His virulent and vulgar reconstruction
of Roxy's, a Las Vegas World War II whorehouse, complete with period
furniture, carpets, knicknacks and the various inhabitants, goes
beyond the boundary of a large piece of sculpture, or even, for
example, the environmental sculpture of Louise Nevelson. This tableau,
to be coherently seen, requires a room to itself-the art, in effect
moves the collector out of the house. If there is such a thing as
an anti-art attitude, rather than a conventional pretence, this
is surely it!
Kienholz can only be said to have developed a stylistic look in
that he avoids as much as possible a ritualisation of style. He
refuses to delineate a symbolic frame of reference in which to operate-the
total experiential world becomes his subject matter. Nor has he
a formalised plastic and esthetic frame of reference; he is able
to deal with things that most artists will shy away from because
formal solutions are wide open-there is no esthetic bar between
Kienholz and any conceivable media, and, more important, perhaps
no technical one.
A recognisable style
His recognisable characteristics of style emerge more clearly through
choice of material combined with working habits. William Seitz,
in the Museum of Modern Art 'Assemblage' catalogue refers to Kienholz
as a cabinet-maker by trade who . . . 'ironically hides the thoroughness
of his craftsmanship behind an appearance of sloppy workmanship'.
This is a mistaken view, although it is true that the type of skills
Kienholz employs might be associated with a kind of primitivism.
Kienholz was brought up on a ranch, and exercisesto the fullest
extent-those rough, manly skills associated with ranching. A true
rancher in the United States, even today, has to be able to do something
of everything; to be carpenter, plumber, electrician, mechanic,
and engineer, as well as handle animals, hunt and skin a trophy.
Kienholz's craftsmanship is stout and blunt: he is without any chicness
whatsoever. He exercises his skills to make his work as solid and
lasting as possible (probably more so than any other assemblagist
working today). His work is not only well engineered, but expoxied
and plasticised as well. Robert Mallory, for example, is also an
assemblagist who makes rigid and permanent the most ephemeral and
dilapidated of materials. But in injecting and immersing his materials
with plastics he embalms the surfaces to create permanent old objects-finally
transformed by definite references to symbolic forms. In contrast,
Kienholz's sense of surface is never sentimental-he is not a junk
sculptor-his surfaces are modified according to the context he has
in mind. For example, in the piece entitled Backseat Dodge '38-a
cut down and reassembled automobile with a beerdrinking couple lovemaking
in the interior-the original chrome exterior components, such as
the headlamps, doorhandles, etc., are completely refurbished to
their original degree of brilliance and the whole of the remaining
exterior surfaces of the coachwork, including the windows has been
sprayed with a shrill blue flocking to produce a tasteless, gaudy
and garish appearance. It is also apparent that Kienholz's skill
in the handling of materials-the way he engineers his tortion and
leverage-is not purely for the sake of good craftsmanship. His astonishing
knowledge of, and facility with, a wide range of industrial processes
is part of a whole new inventory of skills that are as important
to a serious artist as drawing and modelling used to be.
Machine as matrix
Kienholz will also often use the machine as a matrix when he needs
to express something distasteful-to show ugly commercialism he will
either mechanise a human being or combine them with machinery. For
example, Five-Dollar Billy, one of the whores from the 'Boxy'
tableau, is mounted across the top surface of a treadle sewing machine
which can be manually activated to drive the paraplegic limbs. The
result is not only a pun on mechanical sex, but a commentary on
the degrading results to both client and girl.
Of the class of assemblage that has been created within California,
some of it-but not all of it-reveals the qualities of the milieu
out of which it came. Unless its materials are either of an impersonal
or industrial nature or imported, any kind of assemblage is far
more subject to this kind of 'local colour' than is abstract art.
But, since Kienholz is the artist in assemblage who most overtly
deals with social issues, hisart reflects both the eccentricity
of the materials particular to the environment and, even more so,
some of the brutality, absurdity and eccentricity of the environment.
His sensibility is fed by a compulsively puritanical fury which
impels him to action. The world, its absurdity and injustice make
him feel a certain way-he shouts back in anger. When he views with
alarm something of what men do to women, he does not imply the girlie
of the mass media as, for example, in Roy Lichtenstein's art.
A mass- produced mannequin
He will sometimes get beyond the allegorical stereotype and, despite
his usage of the mass-produced mannequin, he will so transform it
that it induces the feeling of a specific person, without its being-at
least in a conventional sense-a portrait. Artist after artist might
raise the issue of women, but in this respect Kienholz stands alone.
Were she to come to life and were we to meet, for example, the little
lady of The Birthday, we would recognise her at once. If
we believe in a visual narrative and dramatic art, and Kienholz
helps in a new way to substantiate the validity of such an art,
then it can become richer and more complex even within a general
situation if certain parts are either peculiar or unique. This sense
of the specific would seem, at times, to allow for greater unknowns,
complexities and dimensions. His subject matter appears always to
derive from some specific event-the exact nature of it may be gleaned
through the title or the homogenised iconographical wholeness or
through a peculiar build-up of iconographic references within and
without a piece. In any event, the end piece often stands at a strange
remove from the concrete event of its origins. The Psycho Vendetta
Case, for example, is not a concrete depiction of a gas or execution
chamber, nor a depiction of Caryl Chessman or Sacco and Vanzetti.
None are there at any discursive levels, yet he leads us to the
banal, mundane or matter of fact entities of specific beings and
events.
Ambiguous-sensate touches
On first sight his work seems to forego all subtlety and nuance.
Perhaps his operatic and theatrical manner -the stridency of his
deployment of the absurd would seem to overwhelm or drain out subtler
levels of poetic ambiguity. The shocking and revolting image in
the interior of the Psycho Vendetta Case is a sickening and
perhaps an obvious command on the psychosadistic and perverted way
society will kill a sexually sick individual ; how the fact and
means of his destruction reflect an even greater sickness. But in
addition to the inflammatory interior there are further, more ambiguous-sensate
touches in this piece-as well as others-for Kienholz works consistently
within precarious arrangements that maintain a peculiar emotional
charge which can never be mistaken for a conventional esthetic arrangement.
He distends his materials for the sake of the ideas that can be
evoked, and not for their intrinsic merit as esthetic objects, and
this, perhaps, is what distinguishes him from anyone else working
within assemblage. At the same time, it makes him an artist not
only hard to adjust to, but hard to place. There is nothing in his
work that can be seized upon as an object, or a thing, and esthetically
enjoyed as such-instead he projects a stream of elusive metaphors
which transform the indifferent material.
To express existence
Kienholz has said that ultimately he is trying to express existence
to ward off non-existence. He is consciously aware of the fragility
of his being, he senses the void, and acts compulsively and obsessively
to ward off that ultimate moment of non-existence. But he subscribes
to none of the religiosity that informs so much of California assemblage;
his views are atheistic and secular. There is also a strain of the
anarchist in Kienholz ; if he senses something is taboo, he will
often deal with it out of sheer perversity. If the subject matter
is not taboo, his particular way of handling makes it taboo. He
is an amoral moralist who reincarnates the sacred. In projecting
himself in the role of a social and psychological moralist, he is
aware that artor at least, sophisticated contemporary art-is not
supposed to deal with such issues. He will do so in protest and
defiance of any such restrictions. As a result, the best of his
pieces become folklore; an irrefutable truth about our society.
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