And, of course, there's this memorable line in Schjeldahl's great "Édouard Manet": "The painting goes off like buried erotic dynamite."
Friday, June 21, 2019
Peter Schjeldahl's Incendiary Criticism
Perhaps the most significant essay in Peter Schjeldahl’s great new collection Hot, Cold, Heavy, Light is “Fireworks,” a sparkling consideration of his enjoyment of things incendiary – bottle rockets, firecrackers, “all manner of blazing gizmos that jump and spin, and fireball-spitting (thup thup thup) Roman candles.” Of bottle rockets, he writes,
A contemporary bottle rocket (“Air Travel” brand, made in Kwangtung) is a two-inch-long cylinder of paper-wrapped propellant and explosive attached to a splinter-thin, nearly foot-long, red-dyed stick. Stand it upright, ideally in a beer bottle, and ignite. Fss. Swish, trailing sparks and smoke. A hundred feet or so up, a flash followed by a crisp bang. Then, if it’s daylight (who can wait for night?), you see the bare red stick drift innocently down.
That last sentence is inspired! The whole piece is inspired! I think “Fireworks” is significant because there are traces of its influence scattered throughout Schjeldahl’s oeuvre. In Hot, Cold, Heavy, Light alone, I detect at least a dozen fireworks-related metaphors. For example:
The buzz of a Friedrich occurs when what have seemed mere tints in tonal composition combust as distinctly scented hues – citron lights, plum darks – and you don’t so much look at a picture as breathe it. [“Caspar David Friedrich”]
Aesthetic sensation inhered in every particle of a world like an explosion, things flying and tumbling. [“Andy Warhol”]
The painting’s violent intelligence detonated pleasure after pleasure. [“Willem de Kooning”]
And none other boasts perhaps his single most satisfying work, the songful One: Number 31, 1950, more than seventeen feet wide: interwoven high-speed skeins in black, white, dove-gray, teal, and fawn-brown oil and enamel bang on the surface while evoking cosmic distances. [“Jackson Pollock”]
I fancied an irritable shudder in the Frick’s sensitively indefinite Chardin, Still Life with Plums (circa 1730), at the blazing Zurbarán’s sudden proximity. [“Zurbarán’s Citrons”]
Looking more than twice her age of twenty-six, the slinky erotic dancer, prostitute, and notorious bisexual preens in a skintight scarlet dress against a blood-red ground – a one-woman general-alarm fire. [“Otto Dix”]
Matisse cross-wires sight with other senses, sparking phantom thrills of taste and smell. [“Henri Matisse – I”]
The show starts slowly, like damp kindling smoldering into fitful flames. [“Henri Matisse – I”]
Matisse burns with resentment for subjects that resist being schemetized. [“Henri Matisse – I”]
His art is fuelled by sex, and it burns clean. [“Henri Matisse – I”]
Cradled in a hammock the other day, I couldn’t imagine anywhere in the world I would rather be, tracking subtle variations in the changing slides: for example, a matchbook first closed, then open, then burning, then, finally, burned. [“Hélio Oiticica”]
The works have in common less a visual vocabulary than a uniform intensity and practically a smell, as of smoldering electrical wires. [“Peter Hujar”]
And, of course, there's this memorable line in Schjeldahl's great "Édouard Manet": "The painting goes off like buried erotic dynamite."
And, of course, there's this memorable line in Schjeldahl's great "Édouard Manet": "The painting goes off like buried erotic dynamite."
Once you’re aware of the “fireworks” motif, you see it everywhere in Schjeldahl’s work. He's pyromaniacal!
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