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by JONATHAN NAPACK
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On
the eve of a major retrospective, painter Ross Bleckner has to face an
unpleasant fact. He's just too, too popular.
"Show me another profession where you
can take a nap," quips Ross Bleckner in his soothing, affable way
as we drink coffee in the skylit living room of this TriBeCa loft. A young
man puts away what remains of the vegetarian curry with white rice he
prepared for lunch-young men, in fact, keep coming and going-and Bleckner
muses on stardom. "Success is all about the fantasy you create for
yourself," he says. And what about his own celebrity? Firecrackers
explode nearby-it's the Chinese New Year-and Bleckner jumps a bit. "That
has nothing to do with my work," he says irritably. "I wish
my life were as exciting as those people make it out to be."
Call it art-world sniping, but denigration
of Bleckner has become routine, even obligatory ever since that August
evening in 1993 when Bleckner threw a benefit party for the Community
Research Initiative on AIDS (CRIA) on his Sagaponack estate (formerly
Truman Capote's summer retreat), and Barry Diller, Bianca Jagger, and
"Styles of the Times" showed up. Suddenly, Bleckner, the gay
activist, the mentor to young artist, the sweet, awkward, again ingenue
still learning to be what his dealer, Mary Boone, once advised him to
be -"a big artist"- had become something else: A high society
fund-raiser. A schmoozer. A socialite. An opportunist.
Bleckner
means a lot of things to a lot of people, which is one reason we're lingering
on the subject. As a rather astoundingly large mid-career retrospective
of some 70 paintings goes up at the Guggenheim in March, Bleckner, at
45, seems on the verge of apotheosis, a man about to experience genuine
American fame. (That he's an early beneficiary of a new Guggenheim policy
mandating more mid-career surveys of American artists doesn't undermine
what amounts to the sanctification of his work.) Yet no major figure on
the art scene since Andy Warhol has inspired such knee-jerk dismissal
on the basis of his social life-and at least Warhol was making smirky
art about celebrity. There's a little irony in Bleckner's eager embrace
of society, and that makes people uneasy. "Artists shouldn't be starving
in the gutter," says a prominent SoHo art dealer who asked not to
be identified, "but they should aspire higher than the consumer culture
they're supposed to transcend."
Envy abounds. It's even murmured that Bleckner,
the son or relatively well-to-do parents from Long Island, did some palm-greasing
along the way. He did, in fact, lend money to art critic Gary Indiana
when the writer was broke in the latter half of the eighties, two years
after Indiana gave Bleckner a good review in The Village Voice. Otherwise,
Bleckner's record looks squeaky-clean, and he doesn't seem the type to
use such strategies, anyway. The Blecknerian assault is charmingly direct;
You see him sizing you up - your age, sexual preference, intelligence,
knowledge about art, potential friendliness or unfriendliness. He makes
the give-and-take of high-end networking seem natural, even appealing;
Benignly cunning in a Bill Clinton sort of way, he finds the middle ground,
connects with you, makes deals with you. He has never "strategized
with an art dealer," he says sharply, but as his friend the artist
Barbara Kruger puts it, "Ross has always had a very examined relationship
to power. If you understand power, and you're smart, you never believe
your own hype. You don't get deluded."
There are no books in the studio; the paint
tubes are neatly aligned; turpentine sits in burnished copper bowls on
polished wooden tables. In a large white room that forms on half of the
studio, Bleckner has put five new paintings up for view. Up on the top
floor, a quiet patio garden resembles a landscape miniature; in the apartment,
the towels draped over a radiator look as though they were cast in bronze.
Bleckner's dachshund, Mini, wiggles around happily. It's like a vast still
life - everything is studied, everything is considered. Raw authenticity
is not Bleckner's style.
Both studio and apartment are in a building
he owns - six run-down floors on a scruffy block on White Street. The
real-estate holding is the keystone to Bleckner's rich-kid image, since
his father lent him the money to buy it in 1974, when he was first starting
out as an artist. In a 1984 review of a show at Mary Boone, for example,
critic Brooks Adams wrote that "perhaps because he does not have
to paint for a living, Bleckner can afford to have the last laugh."
On the other hand, his father paid less than $100,000 for the building-the
price of a studio apartment today-and the criticism sounds odd coming
from a community where so many are renters or marry well. "It's a
very sixties notion, that to be an artist you have to have suffered,"
says Michael Goff, editor-in-chief of Out and one of Bleckner's protégés.
The suburb Bleckner grew up in-Hewlett Harbor,
in one of the famous Five Towns-was indeed, in the 1960s, a warehouse
for much of Manhattan's freshly accumulated wealth. What he remembers
of his childhood and adolescence, however, is crashing his Pontiac GTO
and a sense of alienation he later described in Art in America as "a
certain sadness"- the estrangement he felt as a gay youth: "I
would mimic the social strategies I saw, but I knew that for me they didn't
have resonance."
After graduating George W. Hewlett High
School in 1967 - other students from the era included Donna Karan; Sam
LeFrak's daughter Francine, the producer; the photographer Susan Meiseles;
and Art & Auction editor Bruce Wolmer-he enrolled at New York University,
eventually transferring to its studio-art program. He considered a career
in journalism, but also "thought about being an artist a long time,"
he says. "It's scary to take the plunge." He adds, "It
came to me during an acid trip."
Bleckner's education was eclectic. He studied
with conceptualist Sol Lewitt and photo-realist Chuck Close at NYU, then
did graduate work at CalArts, where John Baldessari held sway with his
own highly theoretical brand of conceptual art. He returned to New York
in 1973. "I first met Ross in the mid-seventies," Julian Schnabel
remembers. "I needed a job and he needed the paint on his ceiling
scraped off. It was horrible, thankless work, and after about half an
hour, I said I didn't want to do it. He said he wouldn't want to, either.
From that day on, we were the best of friends." Schnabel invited
Bleckner to stay at his studio in Texas for his very first show, at Houston's
Contemporary Arts Museum in 1976. Things went a little awry, though. "At
dinner before my opening, my mother was complaining about my attire-she
didn't like my leather jacket," says Schnabel. "So I got angry,
walked out of the restaurant, and left Ross at the table." Bleckner
finishes the story: "I ended up escorting Julian's parents to their
son's first opening."
Nowadays, Bleckner likes to pretend that
he didn't crawl out of his studio until the later eighties, but the truth
is that both his remarkable discipline and his love of schmoozing were
manifest early on. That night, Bleckner hung out at the Mudd Club-conveniently
located right downstairs, since he'd rented the owners the space in his
building-earning the attention of dedicated clubbers like Stephen Saba,
the nightlife critic for Details. "That was in the Mudd club's heyday,"
Saban recalls wistfully. "Bleckner was always there." Says Kruger:
"Ross always zigzagged between being very social and pulling back.
I remember him saying all the time, 'I'd be a recluse if there weren't
so many people around.' "
By day, however, Bleckner worked in his
studio, churning out pastiches in a laborious quest for a style. "Ross
represents an interesting confluence of all these styles floating around
in the mid to late seventies," says critic Lisa Liebmann, who just
published a book on David Salle. "He represented an abstract flip
side of New Image painting, and then he was influenced by the 1979 [Cy]
Twombly show, which was seen as a failure at the time but influenced a
lot of younger painters." He had a few shows in some small and now-forgotten
galleries, with only middling success. "Whenever you wanted to talk
to a dealer, they were sick," he recalls. "I used to think every
dealer in New York was sick." In 1978, he met Mary Boone, a young
dealer who was just about to start her own gallery. At his urging, she
also signed on his friends Schnabel, Kruger, and Salle, who (along with
Eric Fischl) would form the nucleus of her celebrated eighties stable.
"I saved Ross's life," Schnabel
explains, "several time. The night after my opening at Mary's, I
went to Ross's loft and found him unconscious, his leg hanging by a piece
of skin." A falling counterweight had pushed over a ladder, which
had dragged Bleckner's leg into the open elevator shaft and severed the
main artery. " We took him to the emergency room at Beekman Hospital,
and he was lying around waiting for a doctor while there was no pulse
in his foot. Luckily, I reached my cousin, who is a vascular surgeon,
and we moved him into St. Vincent's and took Ross right into microsurgery.
Bleckner kept his leg, but the episode ushered
in a bleak phase of his career. While Salle and Schnabel soared. Bleckner
stalled. His "stripe painting"-op-art candy striped on a Barnett
Newman scale-bombed on arrival at Boone in 1981. "People just thought
I was perpetuating a joke," Bleckner later told FlashArt. Boone's
interest in Bleckner dwindled rapidly until, Schnabel says, he intervened:
"I told Mary, 'If you cancel his show, I'm going to leave the gallery.'
"Apparently he was persuasive, and Bleckner's next (1983) show would
sell out, although Schnabel is still dismissive: "It was frustrating,
because I really believed in Ross's work. When people came to my studio,
I'd often show them his work. She must be doing something right if he's
still showing with her after fifteen years, but this stuff about her or
anyone else making someone's career is a load of horseshit." (Boone
denies that Schnabel ever confronted her; Bleckner says he doesn't know.)
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It
wouldn't have been hard for Schnabel to defend Bleckner, if in fact that's
what happened. Bleckner's dense, meditative, nice paintings posed no threat
to Schnabel's aggressive, splashy Neo-Expressionist aesthetic. But Bleckner
went even further than Schnabel did, actively seeking out and helping
young artist who could conceivably become his competitors, buying their
work, introducing them to clients. His was "a kind of godfather role,"
says dealer Perry Rubenstein. "Ross will embrace something that is
subconsciously threatening to him. And most artists don't do that. They
surround themselves with artist who reflect some part of their work and
don't threaten them."
Thirty-two-year-old
Alexis Rockman, whose hallucinatory zoological paintings have made him
an up-and-coming star of the next generation, managed to turn a brief
and ill-fated apprenticeship into a friendship. "I was a miserable
assistant, and Ross fired me after three months," he says. "But
we became very good friends. Ross taught me a lot about how to be an artist,
both socially and professionally - how to make myself available, how not
to alienate anybody."
The mentoring paid off: As Schnabel and
Salle began living like movie stars (and, indeed, preparing to become
movie directors), Bleckner was quietly being taken up by the East Village
art scene. Peter Halley, a young painter who rejected the kitschy heroics
of Neo-Expressionism for something cooler and more cerebral, wrote in
Arts in the early eighties that Bleckner's striped were a missing link
between a romantic modernism (Mark Rothko, say, or Willem de Kooning)
and a doubting post-modernism (Salle, for instance). Suddenly, younger
artists began to tune in. "He really orchestrated everything brilliantly,"
says Rockman. "These younger guys like [painted and International
With Monument Gallery director] Meyer Vaisman and [painter and Nature
Morte Gallery director] Peter Nagy started getting interested in his work,
and Ross was smart enough to encourage them. Not that it wasn't opportunistic,
but there was also something genuine."
It was at Nagy's storefront gallery that
Bleckner held his pivotal 1984 show, in which he displayed just one large
painting, which combined text and abstraction. "There was a whole
discourse about the process of making art the Halley and Ashley Bickerton
and Sherrie Levine had reopened," remembers dealer Pat Hearn. "For
Ross to use that painting was really clever." When Sonnabend Gallery
brought together four East Village artist-Halley, Vaisman, Jeff Koons,
and Bickerton-for its infamous 1986 "Neo-Geo" show, Bleckner's
coterie was suddenly on top, and Bleckner, whose work was always more
sensual than intellectual, more incidental than theoretical, ended up
riding on the coattails of Neo-Geo, an aridly ideological movement rooted
in half-understood ideas of structuralism. The irony was not lost on him.
"There's always something that somebody looks at as a precedent,"
he says. "maybe people got tired of slopping a lot of paint around.
If my work looked fresh to somebody, I never knew, because people were
whisked past my shows to see some ink drippings in he back room."
The idea for this show came to me during the renovation of this building,"
says Lisa Dennison, the curator at the Guggenheim responsible for the
Bleckner retrospective. "One day," she continues, "I climbed
up to the skylight, and I was reminded of Ross's dome painting. I thought
of Ross's sense of the sublime quality of light-and one of the emphases
of the renovation was the restoration of the natural light that previous
administrations had blocked out." Bleckner's feel for chiaroscuro
and his darkly luminescent paint (he varnishes his paintings to get that
dim glow) did flower into some sublime works in the past ten years, and
Dennison has the pick of the lot: the dome paintings, candlelike light
throbbing in vast domes; the starry constellation paintings; and the paintings
that use urns and other funereal motifs as an allusion to AIDS.
Despite Bleckner's rich web of social and
professional connections, the show itself betrays less evidence of back-scratching
than usually crops up under close examination of a major exhibition. His
good friend David Geffen did contribute a small amount of money through
his foundation, and recent dinner partner Ron Perelman has shown a great
deal of interest in the Guggenheim lately. But Dennison, the curator,
says Ross kept the influence of collectors upon the exhibition to a minimum.
" A lot of collectors yelled at the two of us, demanding to have
their pieces included," says Dennison. "Ross couldn't be swayed."Bleckner's
relative independence from collectors' whims (in this instance, at least)
may stem from the fact that he is much better represented in European
collections than in American ones. Neither Geffen nor Barry Diller-another
close friend-has ever bought a painting. His biggest collector is the
late Thomas Ammann, a Swiss dealer who discovered Bleckner early on, in
1981. Spanish painter Juan Usle explains Bleckner's Continental appeal:
The paintings, he says, "have this kind of old memory. It's like
the light and atmosphere of El Greco's View of Toledo-it's really close
to a European sensibility."
Bleckner may play the social role of a society
painter - a Sargent for our time-but is his art society art? Not in the
narrow sense of a conservative portraiture, certainly, but Bleckner's
art sometimes seems to reflect the concerns of his glamorous circle more
than any personal vision. This seems especially the case with the AIDS-related
work. While undoubtedly sincere, it sometimes has the feeling of those
Victorian marble monuments under weeping willows-it's too perfect, too
composed. Bleckner deserves credit for trying to do something seductive
with paint; his shimmering surfaces are all the more powerful for being
impossible to interpret rationally. But there is a sense of finish to
Bleckner's paintings-a slickness-that reduces some of their gestures to
rhetoric rather than passion. As Jerry Saltz writes in Art in America,
it's "more melodramatic than dramatic."
Bleckner's penchant for being all things
to all people deeply informs his recent work. Not only is he catholic
in his choice of influences, but he seems so happy to accommodate that
people from wildly disparate camps accept his as their own. "There's
something in there for everyone," says Lisa Liebmann. "For those
who had a formal sense for abstraction, those looking for a historicized
ironic message, and those who had a romantic sense of fin de siècle."
Bleckner's
Zelig-like nature - he's ubiquitous, yet hard to pindown-underpins his
social persona as well. He often talks about himself with mildly false
modesty - it's his way of encouraging your sympathy. But he seems genuinely
needy, too, and this craving for affirmation does a lot to explain his
binge-purge attitude toward celebrity, which has him swinging wildly between
solitude and gala events. "I'm like any other insecure guy."
he says. "I'd rather be in some hypersocial environment where I can
avoid real interaction."
"Part of me wants to say," his
friend Rockman mock-admonishes, " 'Don't worry about getting in the
magazines every two minutes. You're not going to become extinct.'"
Bleckner's insecurity also reveals itself
in a very thin skin. At several points during our interview, he lashed
out at the art press, mentioning in particular reviews in Art in America
by current New York Times critic Roberta Smith and a snide remark in Art
& Auction by Smith's husband, Saltz, to the effect that Bleckner used
to be a painter but is now a socialite. Yet if you go back to these reviews,
you find that they were more or less positive.
What should we make of Bleckner's famous
friends? His friendships with Geffen et al. have to be understood in the
context of his sexual identity: The gay world is at the core of Bleckner's
many circles, and he's become enmeshed in the tiny power elite that also
revolves around other gay starts. It seems more inevitable than egregious.
And a lot of the other flak just seems unfair. Roy Lichtenstein and Ellsworth
Kelly, for example, are both richer than Bleckner and do just as much
schmoozing, although they do it out of sight. A Lichtenstein painting
commands roughly four times what a Bleckner painting does; the older painter
also has a house in the Hamptons, and also attends the same functions
as Ron Perelman (who, through Marvel Entertainment, underwrote Lichtenstein's
Guggenheim show last year). And so what if Bleckner is socially adept?
Success like his does not occur without someone's working some angle,
and Bleckner happens to be a very good painter who knows how to work the
society angle. There are equally good painters. But here are also plenty
of artists Bleckner's age whose only talent is for schmoozing.
Besides, as Bleckner asserts, and as his
friends confirm, he genuinely adores the people he socializes with. He's
an opportunist with heart: If his favorite people happen to be among the
richest, most powerful, and most glamorous people in America, hey, that's
between God and Ross Bleckner.
JONATHAN NAPACK
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