I am not a deep
person.
There are puddles
deeper than I am.
I had this epiphany
by way of a trip of the Museum of Modern Art's annual show-and-sale in New York
(MOMA [pronounced "MOE-Ma"] to those "in the know").
I was accompanied by an excruciatingly bohemian friend of mine, and was
anticipating my first foray into modern art with all the excitement of a
five-year-old about to meet Mickey Mouse.
Now, I have always
favored Renaissance and Flemish art, and I must say that, despite my eagerness
for exposure to new things, the trip was less an outing than a rude awakening.
The first room we
ventured into contained a huge pink faux marble Formica slab, just leaning
against the wall.
"Come on,"
I said to my companion. "We'd better go to another room.
They're renovating in here."
"Oh, just look
at that!"
"At what?"
"That incredible
statement about isolation. Doesn't it just speak to you?"
"WHERE?"
She pointed at the
pink monolith. It was incredible all right. I sure didn't believe
it.
"That? The
only thing that says to me is that someone is getting ready to install a
counter!"
My comment was met
with an indignant huff.
After she had spent
the requisite amount of time drinking in the beauty and profundity of this
"creation," we proceeded to our left where, in a trail on the floor,
were a dozen or so large, pieces of slate. I, of course, walked on them.
"Please,
Madam!" a distressed museum guard shouted, running up and grabbing me by
the back of the coat. "Don't touch the exhibit!"
"The exhibit?"
"Yes! The
exhibit!" He pointed to the floor. "This piece is worth
$250,000!"
I gingerly stepped
off the stones and made a mental note to go home and cash in my sidewalk.
My friend and tour guide was nowhere to be seen, obviously fearing for her bohemian
status in SoHo, should she be caught undead, with a pleb like me.
Bemused, I wandered
on alone. The next exhibit was a glass ball on a pedestal in the center
of the room. That was it…for the whole room! It looked like the
scene of a séance suddenly abandoned. The descriptive card read,
"Universal Teardrop," an apt name considering that the price tag on
this baby would have brought not one, but many teardrops to the eyes of any
self-respecting universe. Shaking my head, I moved on.
The next exhibit was
called, "Black Lemons." Certain that I would find my former
Camaro on display, you can imagine my surprise upon discovering hundreds of
lemons--the fruit, that is--painted black and suspended from nylon filaments
attached to the ceiling. There were screens with black lemons painted on
them. There was a giant one in the shape of a chair. There was even
one that had a television set inside it.
It was beyond my
comprehension that people would pay good money to see something that I could
easily duplicate in my refrigerator after three or four weeks.
But the final
exhibit…the piece de resistance, if you will, was the creation called, simply,
"Cans." The room was so littered with empty soda pop cans of
every description that it reminded me of the trash compactor scene in
"Star Wars."
After I recovered
from the assault on my aesthetics, I noticed that this display was a favorite
of the homeless people in the area; most of whom were clustered around the
barred windows, undoubtedly toting up what they could get for it at their local
redemption center.
According to the
card, this pile of litter was purported to be an artistic representation of the
creation of the world.
Ohhhhhkay.
The other people in
the room--the arty-fartsy Greenwich Village crowd, loved this stuff. Some
of the comments I overheard were:
"It was a good
idea…a really good idea…but it isn't conclusive, is it?"
"Not conclusive?
How can you say that? Look at it! Have you ever seen a more
succinct explanation of the origin of the species? It's all right there
in that arrogant arrangement of the Pepsi and Mountain Dew cans!"
"Oh, don't you
just adore Steinputz? I think this is the most meaningful thing he's ever
done!"
God, I felt sorry for
Steinputz.
While I was standing
there, a MOMA official whisked in and announced that this exhibit had just been
sold for $45 million! There was respectful, subdued applause.
I wondered if they'd
deliver it in a garbage truck.
Fed up, I decided to
try a little experiment. I stood in front of a steel door with an EXIT
sign above it, and just stared at it. After a while, someone walked up to
me, looked at the EXIT sign, then at me, then at the EXIT sign again.
"What are you
looking at?" he asked.
"Only the
clearest explanation of death I've ever seen!" I replied, never taking my
eyes off the sign.
He looked again.
"Why, yes, you're right! I can't understand how I could have missed
something this fabulous! Oh, Enid, come over here and look at this.
It's magnificent!"
In less time than it
takes Andy Warhol to sneer at Andrew Wyeth, I had been joined by an army of
creative cognoscenti, all babbling about this "masterpiece" before
us.
I thought I had seen
everything until people started bidding on it.
I heard later that
the door and the EXIT sign sold for $1.5 million.
There is no doubt in
my mind that somewhere P.T. Barnum is rolling on the floor, laughing himself
sick.
So funny, Carson. I've never been brave enough to actually put my thoughts about modern art out in public. One time I went to an exhibit and walked into a black room: walls, floor, ceiling with just a night light in one corner so we could walk around without bumping into each other. I asked, "What is this supposed to be?" Response, "Be quiet. The artist might hear you."
ReplyDeleteI wouldn't care if he did. Perhaps he'd step forward and explain!
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