
letter
from new york : : matthew rose
a
sunny massacre of innocenc - james meyer's ironic pentameter
The
origins of American Pop Art, oddly enough, might date to a 1940s radio program.
During a broadcast of the popular show Fibber & Molly McGee ("Molly's
Easter Dress Creation," March 23, 1948), Harlow Wilcox, the obessed spokesperson
for the show's sponsor, Johnson's "Self-Polishing Glo-Coat Wax," emerges
frustrated from the office of Wistful Vista's fashion maven, a Monsieur Henri.
Henri turns down
Wilcox's idea for a new fashion trend that brought together modernity, repetition
and advertising: a printed dress featuring cans of Johnson's Glo-Coat (and a signature
and his telephone number) set in a colorful and repetitive pattern. Wilcox pumped
- no matter what the occasion - this new product specifically-designed for America's
new suburban reality: linoleum. And yes, linoleum was all over Wistful Vista,
an idealized American suburbia, a small town harmony of dumbbells, wanna be's,
goof offs and comedic missteps, but one that presaged the post-war suburbia that
spread like a rash across the country.
Wilcox's
ad campaign is pure pop: fashion in the age of mechanical reproduction wasn't
due for another 20 years. The emergence of commercial (advertising) and popular
material and subjects into high art began famously in the in the early 20th century
with Picasso/Braque works, but took root more energetically in the 1950s, led
largely by Robert Rauschenberg, Jasper Johns and then, more notoriously and perhaps
more nihilisticall,y Andy Warhol. Each sought to drown sunny American innocence,
and each succeeded with a signature style.
This
rather long introduction leads us to the paintings of James Meyer - a 45-year
old painter who might be called a diarist of America's suburban malaise, as his
work is set within a sun-dappled parable of America and its paranoid obsession
with innocence. Meyer's pedigree is Pop. For more than two decades James has been
the principle assistant to Pop master Jasper Johns (I met Meyer in the early 1990s
when I wrote a never-published feature piece about artist assistants for Vogue).
I was always fascinated with the strange relationship the two artists had - James
once told me that any lines he drew on Johns' canvases "would eventually
be erased and redrawn by Jasper."
Johns
brought a Duchampian vision to Pop as James, two generations later, held onto
emotional and somewhat realistic narratives that went hand-in-hand with painting.
I grew up with Johns' aesthetic, but James' suburbia (and Warhol's nihilism).
All three artists' works have always made sense to me as a moving picture (or
target) of the American self.

Contemporary
Vision, 2005 Watercolor on paper 48 x 40 inches Courtesy Sandra Gering Gallery,
NYC, NY
Two
recent exhibitions of Meyer's paintings and watercolors bear this out. Children
pose in sunny locales, at amusement parks, splashing about in the sun, or juxtaposed
with third world scenes of suffering in a tightly composed "window."
In works such as Race, 2004, Summer Lesson, 2004 or Transformation, 2004, an all-over
composition that bends and twists a photographic origin into a vibrant, almost
light-emitting window. Still, the narrative, sometimes parable qualities are brought
to bear on the subject: A little girl swings high off a tree, almost out of the
picture frame, while an older woman walks by - a simple reflection on age, innocent
and spirituality (New Works on Paper, 4 - 31, 2005 at Weber Fine Art www.artnet.com/weberfineart.chtml.
Meyer often superimposes one window upon another, in ways that remind one of Eric
Fischl or David Salle, as both compositional strategy and as narrative subtitle,
such as the works in Ironic Pentameter at the Sandra Gering gallery in Chelsea,
in New York City (www.geringgallery.com/).

Not
Untitled, 2005 Watercolor on paper 40 x 60 inches Courtesy Sandra Gering Gallery,
NYC, NY
Meyer,
however, isn't as pornographic or oblique as those 1980s artists. In Not Untitled,
2005 or Song of Minimalism, 2005 there is a compression of images of innocence
and suffering, delivered up in brightly expressed watercolors that could make
for heartbreaking greeting cards. The effect is direct, the compositions sure
and the message clear: the delicious fantasy of innocence is slaughtered in the
most insidious of ways. Happy snapshots of suburbia before the Fall. The results
are complex and engaging images.

Songs
of Minimalism, 2005 Watercolor on paper 40 x 60 inches Courtesy Sandra Gering
Gallery, NYC, NY
What
follows is an exchange that took place over the course of 2005
following
on the heels of James Meyer's successful exhibition at Sandra Gering Gallery in
Chelsea.
What
first prompted you to draw, and to make art?
I
first started drawing on the black board when our grade school teacher was out
of the room, there was another kid that was as good as I was and we would have
a draw off until the teacher came back to discover 20 or 30 drawings on the board.
Nobody claimed to have done them
Later I saw that drawing was the only thing
I did well so it became a way of me feeling good about being in school.
And
what were the drawings - irreverent images of the teacher?
They
were more like cartoons, really. I just started to draw, and sometimes the drawing
turned into a person, sometimes a monster. They really went anywhere.
When
did you begin collecting your drawings in some sort of order and realize that
making these things was a way to map out a personal or philosophical approach
to the world?
I
began to think of these drawings as something different in high school. My art
teacher was great, and she provided a way out of school for me, giving me a key
to the classroom. I could come and go as I pleased. She also had shows with artists
in New York City, so we would go there, too. I had abandoned drawing in my senor
year and was working on things that weren't really art. For example,. I blocked
the school hallway off with a sign marked "Hallway Closed," when it
really wasn't - just to see who would turn around. I would take coffee and a cup
and spoon and spill a little on a desk, and set up a situation of drinking coffee
in the school where there wasn't any coffee. Then, when I was about 17, I read
a piece by Pierre Cabbane, "Dialogue with Marcel Duchamp," (1967) where
Duchamp announced that "painting was dead." I felt I had to prove him
wrong and so gravitated toward painting. It only took 20 years for the interest
to come back to it.
When
did you first realize that making art was something important to you
Before
art school? Afterwards?
Art
was always important to me - it got me positive attention in school. I was asked
to do murals, and produced several in junior high school. In fact, I did little
else in school. In high school, I produced prints and even showed them in town
(Northport, Long Island). An artist approached me and asked me some questions
about printmaking and proposed we trade skills. She had a life drawing class in
the afternoon and I could come for free if I showed her students how to make prints.
So one or two days a week, I would leave school around 12:00 and take the train
to Port Jefferson several towns away to teach. It was great fun and I met a lot
of great people. But I never told anyone - not my parents or teachers and I ended
up paying for it later: A truant officer went looking for me. I saw him several
times but he never caught me. It seems dumb now I'm sure the school would have
let me go if I told them what I was doing, but I didn't.
Art
school was a bust, I stayed for two years and was finally asked to leave because
I would hand in whatever I was working on and pay no attention to the assignment.
The last straw came when I was getting reviewed in my second year. The teacher
was very late to class, and I got pissed off. I put my paintings back in my car
(I had driven them in from long Island - about 50 miles). Well, the teacher showed
up just as I was bringing my last painting out and asked me where I was going.
I told him he was late, and I was leaving and that was the end of school. In a
sense, my teachers had already told me I didn't need art school, since I knew
what I wanted to make. So I went to Washington D.C. and started to paint. To be
an artist I had a cheap, $100 a month apartment, and really didn't have to do
much to make my rent. Over the course of a few months (this was the early 1980s),
I made some paintings and moved back to New York. All my friends had graduated
and several opened Galleries on the Lower East Side. They let me live in these
beat up spaces and occasionally show my paintings.
Tell
me about your meeting with Johns
Had
I not gone to art school I would have barely known that Jasper Johns was an artist.
In fact during those years, I had no idea what his work was like. I was looking
for a job, and asked one of my friends who had a gallery, who might be interested
in hiring me full time? I wanted to apprentice with someone, but being very ignorant
of the art world, it never occurred to me that someone would have a studio - to
make art in! - and have another studio in the country for the summer time. The
gallery (I'm sure laughing all the way) gave me a list of artists - Roy Lichtenstein,
Rauschenberg, Frank Stella, Jasper Johns, Richard Artchswager and others. It was
July at the time, and of course, nobody was around but I dutifully knocked on
each door. Someone did, however, open the door at Johns' studio. It was Al Taylor
an artist now dead who had worked for Rauschenberg and left, and then got roped
into helping Jasper because he had just come back to New York and was out of money.
Al was taking prints out of frames and he thought I was expected - as I would
now assume anyone was expected, because nobody "just shows up." So,
I dropped my slides off with a letter of recommendation, and went home. My wife
Amy asked me if I had another copy of my resume and letter to use the following
day. I didn't so I went back to get the copy from Taylor the next day to make
a copy and Jasper was there. All I wanted were my slides and letter back. He thought
I was out of my mind, but said I could have the material back after we talked.
So, two hours later, he hired me, told me to come back the next day and that was
more than 10 years ago.
Can
you say that working for Johns changed the way you make art? How has it affected
you in your visual mapping of a canvas?
Jasper
has a way of working that is very economical and time saving. If you spent time
drawing something, then why draw it again? I learned to trace work, enlarge it,
reuse it, and all the while acquire a freedom in reproducing images - a lot of
these ideas come from print making, and this was a kind of print making that Jasper
did often. Degas did a lot of these time-saving techniques, you can make a lot
of art in very little time. Another thing Jasper taught me was how to use encaustic.
For along time I didn't work in it out of respect for his medium. I was asked
to demonstrate encaustic for CT art teachers and I realized how much I knew about
it. In fact the first time I had ever made an encaustic painting was about four
years ago. I fell in love with the medium and soon I gave away my oil paints to
another artist. Encaustic is very fast, so you work quickly in a short period
of time.
In the
construction of the painting itself, Jasper showed me how to paint out some things,
to lose part of the work when making variations, and in altering the surface.
What
about Johns' considerations in making a work? What sorts of, say, reverberations
of an idea with regards to a painting, the thinking that goes behind the work,
have echoed with you?
Absolutely.
Jasper taught me to think about what I'm making before I make it. I think for
weeks at a time before I begin a series, and then I produce the series in short
period of time. I think more before I work on them again, and the process moves
along like that. But sometimes I think so much and of course, nobody pays any
attention to something you've put there - like this idea of Ironic Pentameter.
I thought it was so great - 5 works: three and two. Three being same with this
first and third world viewing each other, the titles all a parody of the art world,
and the two others being true to me, to myself
the real titles real to me
and the art building on thought. A bit personal, I guess
I don't think one
person asked me about it
and when I mentioned it to people they saw it, but
most people didn't
It's curious, the process of developing an idea to the
finished piece
What
would you say was your subject when you first began image-making? Has this changed
over time?
My
subject has always been people living in some kind of society. When I made those
early drawings, it was more about individual psychology or better, how people
would react to events. Then, I did paintings of people on trains. There were different
riders occupying different trains. One car had stock market runners (kids just
out of school) and young construction workers because they have the same hours
- 6 am to 4 pm. Then I got stuck. I couldn't think of anything to make, so I spent
a month not doing anything and became very worried. My uncle called and said they
were going to the Eastern Shore. Did I want to come? We put chairs in his pickup
truck and sat in the bed driving out of Washington D.C. I sat in the back watching
people in cars drive by. Each had its own flavor. The riders, the family, taking
their environment with them as they traveled through another environment, - I
loved this. And suddenly I was off - I made eight paintings and showed them when
I got back to NYC.
Why
have you focused so strongly on American suburbia?
Suburbia
is what I know. It's not like I'm looking from the outside slumming or in an anthropological
way. I think that the suburban idea is so startling because the notion of "one-size-fits-all"
has conquered the American psyche - or has appeared to- and that is simply not
the case. I can remember my neighborhood. There was an old sand pit a mile square
and 300 to 400 feet deep. When the company that owned and operated the pit hit
clay they decided to build houses there. Except it still looked like a sand pit
- only with houses in it! The builders kept coming down on their prices until
people started moving in. I can remember going to other kids houses, a good friend
of mine's family really couldn't afford to live there, and so they had no furniture
in the house. As a kid you kind of didn't pay attention to it, I delivered newspapers
in the morning so I got to see a lot of these people.
One
house, the father was a truck driver. He would park his 18-wheel rig on the front
lawn when he was home. The kids were older, but lived at home and were on the
creepy side and were always trying to get me to come in and stay but it was too
weird even for me. I tend to have a high tolerance for that, too. Suburbia is
pretty strong stuff
I remember the film, The Rivers Edge where these teenagers
kill a friend of theirs and keep him around and show other kids and eventually
the police catch on and everyone gets caught, and one kid hangs himself in jail.
That's based on a true story. In another town a man would troll malls and kidnap
kids and keep them in a warren of tunnels. One kid escapes and eventually they
catch this madman
these events are fascinating to me because on the surface
everything seems quiet and calm. My neighbor was first generation American and
we had a pellet gun and his grandfather would ask me to bring it whenever I can
over so he could shoot pigeons to eat. True.
Sounds
like a strange kind of Paradise Lost.
I
think 1950s suburbia has been largely forgotten. My parents kept in touch with
their roots - a life 180 degrees in the opposite direction from American suburbia.
We would visit my grandmother who lived in this dying coalmining town full of
Greek orthodox Catholics. Every time we visited, the town would appear a little
more dead.
Are
you inspired by these visions, then? Are you translating them?
In
my new show, Ironic Pentameter, there are a few works that are really me: Notes
from Underground is one in particular - based on the novel by Dostoyevsky. There
is this man narrating his story, trying to be something and always failing, and
always blaming other people for his poor behavior. So he watches the world from
his silent perch. I can't help but be like that in a way, but I want to make things
that people can revisit year after year and continue to see something new - like
this coalmining town. What I realized was how much my vision of childhood was
influenced by my view of innocence - and perception. How key that was to my whole
way of working. I had to write my "journey in art" for the Gotlieb Foundation.
It was very helpful, actually in that it made me realize how much I relied on
children and youth, this childlike questioning, finding out about people
it all happens when you are very young, a teenager. It's a conceptual arena for
composition to take place. That's why I use so many examples of children in my
work.
What
is the role of photography in your work?
I
collect images from old magazines as well as photographs that people throw away,
sometimes I get some kids and have them play and take pictures. It is by combining
these sources that I arrive at a final image. There is sort of a movement toward
an idea and using the photos forces the idea to the surface. In this last group,
Ironic Pentameter, I used childhood photos I unearthed
They were from a
festival that we went to in the desert in California. The rides were the sorts
of things you'd find in Mexico, older stylized, this western feeling but in excess
where
you have leisure and reality. Here are histories, stories, all crashing in upon
each other
and of course, children abound. They don't see it all, do they?
Matthew Rose
is an artist and writer based in Paris.
E-mail: mistahrose at yahoo dot com
Web: http://homepage.mac.com/mistahcoughdrop/
James
Meyer Information:
Weber Fine Art http://www.artnet.com/weberfineart.html
Sandra Gering Gallery http://www.geringgallery.com/