On a Scale that Competes with the World: The Art of Edward and Nancy Reddin Kienholz
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A fully illustrated review of the contemporary artwork of Edward and Nancy Kienholz, which clarifies its importance in American art history and illuminates its critique of American society and culture.
Robert L. Pincus
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On a Scale that Competes with the World - Robert L. Pincus
ON A SCALE THAT COMPETES WITH THE WORLD THE ART OF EDWARD AND NANCY REDDIN KIENHOLZ
ROBERT L. PINCUS
UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA PRESS
BERKELEY LOS ANGELES OXFORD
University of California Press
Berkeley and Los Angeles, California
University of California Press Oxford, England
Copyright © 1990 by The Regents of the University of California
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
Pincus, Robert L. On a scale that competes with the world: the art of Edward and Nancy Reddin Kienholz/Robert L. Pincus, p. cm.
Includes bibliographical references. ISBN 0-520-06730-4 (alk. paper) 1. Kienholz, Edward, 1927- —Criticism and interpretation.
2. Reddin-Kienholz, Nancy, 1943- —Criticism and interpretation.
I. Title. N6537.K48P56 1990 700.92'2—dc20 90-35430
CIP
Printed in the United States of America
123456789
The paper used in this publication meets the minimum requirements of American National Standard for Information Sciences—Permanence of Paper for Printed Library Materials, ANSI Z39.48-1984
To my mother and father, whose love of books and marvelous library quietly taught me to revere the craft of writing.
And to my wife Georgianna, who believed in me from the first word to the last.
CONTENTS 1
CONTENTS 1
LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
A THEORETICAL PREFACE
INTRODUCTION
INTERCHAPTER ONE Drift and Consolidation: Becoming An Artist
ONE The Horrific Object: Sculpture as Social Criticism
INTERCHAPTER TWO Two Rites of Passage
TWO Generic Tragedies: The Creation of a Narrative Sculptural Art
INTERCHAPTER THREE The Grand Tour of the Tableaux
THREE Words, Numbers, and Rooms: Concept Tableaux, Watercolors, and Occasional Tableaux
INTERCHAPTER FOUR An Era of Collaboration
FOUR Filling the White Easel: Rejections of, Re turns to, America
CHRONOLOGY
NOTES
BIBLIOGRAPHY
INDEX
LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS
Plates
1. Edward Kienholz, Partial view of Roxy’s (1961), with Ben Brown (at left) and Diana Poole, Miss Universal (at right). Mixed media environment. Collection of Rinehard Onnasch, Berlin.
Photograph: J. Littkemann.
2. Edward Kienholz, Partial view of Roxy’s, with Five Dollar Billy (at center in foreground), Cockeyed Jenny (at center in background), and Miss Cherry Delight (at left in background). Photograph: J. Littkemann.
3. Edward Kienholz, John Doe (1959). Mixed media assemblage. Courtesy of the The Menil Collection, Houston. Photograph: Susan Einstein.
4. Edward Kienholz, The Illegal Operation (1962). Mixed media tableau. Collection of Monte and Betty Factor, Santa Monica.
5. Edward Kienholz, The Birthday (1964). Mixed media tableau. Collection of the Staatsgalerie Stuttgart.
6. Edward Kienholz, The Back Seat Dodge ‘38 (1964). Mixed media tableau. Collection of the Los Angeles County Museum of Art; purchased with funds provided by the Art Museum Council.
7. Edward Kienholz, The Wait (1964-1965). Mixed media tableau. Collection of the Whitney Museum of American Art, New York; gift of the Howard and Jean Lipman Foundation, Inc.
8. Edward Kienholz, Partial view of the interior of The Beanery (1965). Mixed media environment. Collection of the Stedelijk Museum, Amsterdam.
9. Edward Kienholz. Interior of The State Hospital (1966). Mixed media tableau. Collection of the Moderna Museet (Nationalmuseum), Stockholm. Photograph: Statens Konstmuseer.
10. Edward Kienholz, The Portable War Memorial (1968). Mixed media tableau. Collection of the Museum Ludwig, Museen der Stadt Köln.
11. Edward Kienholz and Nancy Reddin Kienholz, Sollie 17(1979—1980). Mixed media tableau. Private collection, Los Angeles.
12. Edward Kienholz and Nancy Reddin Kienholz, The Night Clerk at the Young Hotel (1982-1983). Mixed media tableau. Collection of the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art; purchased through a gift of Mrs. Henry Potter Russell.
13. Edward Kienholz and Nancy Reddin Kienholz, Interior of The Pedicord Apts. (1982-1983). Mixed media environment.
Collection of the Frederick R. Weisman Foundation, Los Angeles.
14. Edward Kienholz and Nancy Reddin Kienholz, Portrait of a Mother
With Past Affixed Also (1980-1981). Mixed media tableau. Collection of the Walker Art Center, Minneapolis; Walker Special Purchase Fund, 1985.
15. Edward Kienholz and Nancy Reddin Kienholz, Detail of The Hoerengracht (1984—1988). Mixed media tableau. Collection of the Daniel Tempion Foundation, Paris. Photograph: Angelika Weidling.
16. Edward Kienholz and Nancy Reddin Kienholz, Holding the Dog (1986). Mixed media tableau. Collection of Mandy and Cliff Einstein, Los Angeles.
Figures
Figures
1. Portrait of Edward Kienholz, 1958. xiv
2. George Herms, The Meat Market (1960-1961). Tableau arrangement of five mixed media assemblages. Collection of the artist. 3
3. Claes Oldenburg's monumental scale sculpture of a clothespin, installed in downtown Philadelphia. © Claes Oldenburg/VAGA New York 1990. Photograph courtesy of The Leo Castelli Gallery. 5
4. Donald Judd, Untitled (1966). Blue lacquer on aluminum and galvanized iron. Collection of the Norton Simon Museum of Art, Pasadena; partial purchase and partial gift of the artist. 6
5. Edward Kienholz, Untitled (1955). Painted wood construction. Collection of the La Jolla Museum of Contemporary Art; gift of Mr. and Mrs. M. Gribin. 9
6. Edward Kienholz's homage to his partner at the Ferus Gallery from 1957 to 1958 and his early champion, Walter Hopps Hopps Hopps (1960). Mixed media assemblage. Collection of the Lannan Foundation, Los Angeles. 10
7. Wallace Berman, Temple (1956; destroyed). Mixed media assemblage. Photograph: Charles Brittin. 15
8. Wallace Berman, Detail of Temple, showing pages of Semina. Photograph: Charles Brittin. 15
9. Edward Kienholz, Jane Doe (1960). Mixed media assemblage. Collection of Laura Lee Stearns, Los Angeles. Photograph: Frank J. Thomas. 17
10. Edward Kienholz, A view of the back of John Doe. Photograph: Susan Einstein. 21
11. Edward Kienholz, The Psycho-Vendetta Case (1960). Mixed media assemblage. Collection of the Museum Moderner Kunst, Vienna. 22
12. Ben Shahn, The Passion of Sacco and Vanzetti (1931- 1932). Oil on canvas. Collection of the Whitney Museum of American Art, New York; gift of Edith and Milton Lowenthal in memory of Juliana Force. © The Estate of Ben Shahn/VAGA New York 1990. 23
13. Edward Kienholz, Roxy's (partial view), in its original installation at the Ferus Gallery in 1962. Ben Brown is in the immediate foreground (at right); adjacent to the same wall, the figurative assemblages, from closest to furthest, are: A Lady Named Zoa, Fifi, A Lost Angel, and The Madame. Photograph: Seymour Rosen. 25
14. Jean Tinguely with his Homage to New York (1960; destroyed). Metal assemblage with mechanical parts. Remnants are in the collection of the Museum of Modern Art, New York. Photograph: David S. Gahr. 31
15. Paul Conrad's political cartoon, It's awful! … Close the door!!,
was published in the Los Angeles Times on March 30,1966, at the height of the controversy surrounding Kienholz's exhibition at the Los Angeles County Museum of Art. Copyright, 1966. Los Angeles Times. Reprinted with permission. 32
16. An installation view of Andy Warhol's first exhibition of the Campbell's Soup Can paintings in 1962 at the Ferus Gallery in Los Angeles. Photograph: Seymour Rosen. 35
17. Robert Rauschenberg, Monogram (1957). Mixed media assemblage. Collection of the Moderna Museet, Stockholm. © Robert Rauschenberg/VAGA New York 1990. Photograph courtesy of The Leo Castelli Gallery. 37
18. Edward Kienholz, Odious to Rauschenberg (1960). Mixed media assemblage. Private collection, Los Angeles. 38
19. Edward Kienholz, A Lady Named Zoe (1961). Mixed media assemblage. Collection of the Los Angeles County Museum of Art; gift of Mrs. Lillian Alpers. 39
20. Edward Kienholz, Interior of The Back Seat Dodge '38. 43
21. Edward Kienholz, Wide view of the interior of The Beanery. 46
22. Edward Kienholz, An example of the Watercolors (1969), first sold for the amount stenciled on the surface of each picture. Watercolor and pencil on paper; courtesy of the artists. 55
23. Edward Kienholz, The Art Show (1963-1977). Mixed media tableau. Collection of Klaus and Gisele Groenke, Berlin and Hope, Idaho. 57
24. John Baldessari, Terms Most Useful In Describing Creative Works of Art (1966-1968). Acrylic on canvas. Collection of the La Jolla Museum of Contemporary Art; gift of John Oldenkamp. 59
25. Joseph Kosuth: One and three chairs (1965). Wooden folding chair, photographic copy of the chair, and photographic enlargement of a dictionary definition of a chair. Collection of the Museum of Modern Art, New York; Larry
Aldrich Foundation Fund. Joseph Kosuth/VAGA New York 1990. 59
26. Edward Kienholz, Framed text of the Concept Tableau,
After the Ball Is Over #1 (1964). Collection of the artists. 61 27. Edward Kienholz, Exterior of The State Hospital. 65
28. Edward Kienholz, Detail of The Portable War Memorial. 69 29. George Caleb Bingham, The Jolly Flatboatmen in Port
(1857). Oil on canvas. Collection of The Saint Louis Art
Museum. 72
30. William Sidney Mount, Dancing on the Barn Floor (1831).
Oil on canvas. Collection of the Museums at Stony Brook, New York; gift of Mr. and Mrs. Ward Melville, 1955. 72
31. George Segal, Man Sitting at a Table (1961). Mixed media
tableau. Collection of the Städtische Museum Abteiberg, Mönchen Gladbach, Germany; courtesy of the Sidney
Janis Gallery, New York, © George Segal/VAGA New
York 1990. 73
32. George Segal, The Execution (1967). Mixed media tableau.
Collection of the Vancouver Art Gallery; gift of Mr. and Mrs. Charles Diamond and Mr. and Mrs. Gordon Diamond.
Photograph: Jim Gorman. © George SegalNVAGA New
York 1990. 75
33. Edward Kienholz and Nancy Reddin Kienholz in 1984. 76
34. Edward Kienholz and Nancy Reddin Kienholz, The Rhine
stone Beaver Peep Show Triptych (1980). Collection of the artists. 78
35. Edward Kienholz, Five Car Stud (1969-1972). Mixed media
tableau. Private collection, Japan. 81
36. Edward and Nancy Reddin Kienholz, Sawdy (1972). Mixed
media assemblage. Edition of 50. Courtesy of Gemini GEL,
Los Angeles. 84
37. Edward Kienholz and Nancy Reddin Kienholz, White Easel
with Face (1977). Mixed media tableau. Collection of the
artists. Photograph: Thomas P. Vinetz. 87
38. Edward Kienholz and Nancy Reddin Kienholz, White Easel
with Machine Pistol (1979). Mixed media tableau. Collec
tion of the artists. Photograph: Thomas P. Vinetz. 87
39. Edward Kienholz and Nancy Reddin Kienholz, Exterior of
Sollie 17. 91
40. Edward Kienholz and Nancy Reddin Kienholz, Night Clerk at the Young Hotel. 92
41. Edward Kienholz and Nancy Reddin Kienholz, Lobby of The Pedicord Apts. 94
42. Edward Kienholz and Nancy Reddin Kienholz, The Jesus
Corner (1982). Collection of the artists. Photograph: Chris
Sweat. 96
43. Edward Kienholz and Nancy Reddin Kienholz, Exterior of Portrait of a Mother With Past Affixed Also. 98
44. Michael McMillen, Central Meridian (1981). Mixed media environment. Collection of the Los Angeles County
Museum of Art. Photograph: Robbert Flick. 100
45. Edward Kienholz and Nancy Reddin Kienholz, The Gray Window Becoming (1983-1984). Mixed media tableau.
Collection of the artists. 102
46. Edward Kienholz and Nancy Reddin Kienholz, Detail of The Gray Window Becoming (1983-1984). 104
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
The book. I note these contributions with a deep sense of gratitude.
Edward Kienholz and Nancy Reddin Kienholz have endured my many interviews with them as well as my numerous written queries with graciousness, patience, and warmth. They opened their studio and archives to me, providing me with insights and material I could not have otherwise brought to this essay. Their great generosity of character has been an inspiration throughout the creation of this book, and I hope that some of their vitality and integrity manifests itself in this essay on their art.
Three eminent scholars, Susan C. Larsen, Jay Martin, and Marjorie Perloff, offered encouragement and helpful direction as my research took shape as a doctoral dissertation. Their editing of and observations concerning my manuscript were astute, sensitive, and constructively critical. The inspired teaching of all three of these professors had a profound, if less tangible, impact on this essay as well; so, too, did the instruction and insights of Dickran Tashjian and Victoria Kogan at an earlier stage in my thinking about art, art criticism, art history, and the relationship of all three to that even broader topic: culture.
Others gave their time freely too, at different stages in my research; they shared their remembrances of the past, as they pertain to this study. The late Robert Alexander, Billy Al Bengston, Elizabeth Asher, Patricia Faure, Monty and Betty Factor, Pontus Hulten, Richard Jackson, Paul Kantor, David Meltzer, Lyn Kienholz, Seymour Rosen, and Maurice Tuchman all provided valuable insights into Kienholz’s and the
Kienkholzes art and milieu.
The contributions of many individuals and institutions to the accompanying visual material in this book are duly acknowledged in the list of illustrations, but I want to single out L. A. Louver Gallery, the artists’ American dealer, for its large contribution to the images that accompany my text. In this and other ways, the assistance of gallery owner Peter Goulds and staff members Kimberly Davis and Jon Sorensen was invaluable.
Stanley Holwitz, assistant director of the University of California Press, was enthusiastic about and supportive of this project from the moment I brought the idea to him eight years ago. Scott Mahler, my sponsoring editor at the Press, has been a sensitive and intelligent reader of my book, not to mention its enthusiastic champion. In the final stages of editing, Paula Cizmar gave it a judicious, meticulous, and appreciative reading, as did Shirley Warren. Robert Ross added that other vital component of a book about art: an intelligent and elegant design.
A final thanks to my son Matthew, who was such a congenial baby during the penultimate stages of this book that I actually found time to assemble its many photographs and give the text a conscientious last reading without losing too much sleep.
San Diego, California Robert L. Pincus
January 1990
A THEORETICAL PREFACE
History of art,… instructs us that art, every art, constantly strives to break through the limitations provided by its material, inclining at one time toward this one, at another time toward that one of the other arts.
—Jan Mukarovsky, The Essence of the Visual Arts
(1966)
The art of Edward Kienholz has engaged me as both critic and scholar for more than a decade now. It was during the writing of my first essay on his work, in 1978, that I became convinced that Kienholz had created some of the most significant and underrated sculpture of the post-1945 era. And more than a decade later I remain unswayed in my estimation of the importance of the work that he forged on his own until 1972, and thereafter with his wife, Nancy Reddin Kienholz, as an official collaborator.'
Yet in an era that saw the Abstract Expressionist sculpture of David Smith give way to the Minimalist objects of Donald Judd or Tony Smith, Edward Kienholz’s large scale narrative tableaux seemed to be something of an anomaly. Barbara Rose articulated the dilemma that his work posed in a 1963 review of his first environmental work, Roxy’s (1961): Kienholz obviously has something to say, but why has he chosen to express himself visually and not verbally?
(New York Letter,
65).
Both the work created by Kienholz alone and with Reddin Kienholz aspires, in some part, to the condition of literature. Yet in its sheer physicality, its human scale, and its use of detail, the Kienholzes’ assemblages and tableaux have an effect quite different from literature. We read
these works differently than we would a short story, a play, or a novel since we must piece together a tale from the figures and their surrounding environments. Only in the earliest tableaux are there explicitly literary clues, such as the letters in Roxy’s and The Birthday (1964), placed in half concealed locales so that the viewer became a voyeur while reading them. We also interpret these tableaux differently than we would a narrative painting, for