ASK DR. BOLI.

Yesterday Dr. Boli had a little too much to say about current trends in art, and specifically about how we judge art entirely by its utility, which is to say by the message it conveys. He brought up some examples of exhibits by living artists at the Carnegie Museum of Art.

Our frequent correspondent “Maypo” asked,

What is the good Doctor’s prediction of the timing of when the Carnegie Museum’s patrons lose their collective patience with this nonsense?

Dr. Boli thought this over, possibly for as much as thirty seconds, and came up with the answer he is sure is correct: when it is replaced with a different nonsense.

That is, after all, what has always happened in the past. The discussion came up in the first place because of an abstract expressionist work “of a purely decorative nature” by Virgil Cantini.

Much of abstract expressionism was arguably nonsense, but the whole point of it, and the thing the average yokel objected to, was that it had no message. As much as you could mock abstract expressionism, it trusted the viewer to make an interpretation of the work—or no interpretation, as Cantini apparently believed—from the work itself. Now you can ask what a work means and be given a correct and indisputable answer: “It means we should be aware of the marginalized living among us.” How do you know? “Because it has ‘be aware of the marginalized living among us’ written in 512-point Franklin Gothic on the front.”

But the great wheel keeps turning. There will come a time when art for the sake of message is old-fashioned, and only the yokels and the philistines will come to the museum looking for something with words on it that will tell them what to think. We might suppose that will be a glorious day for art. But it probably will not be. It will probably be the triumph of a different kind of nonsense that we have not been able to predict. But it will displace the nonsense that is current today.

ALL ART IS QUITE USELESS.

A friend of Dr. Boli’s pointed out a sculpture by Virgil Cantini in Gateway Towers, a 27-floor 1960s modernist apartment building at the Point in Pittsburgh. Because this friend is the sort of friend who prefers not to leave stones unturned, he dug up a newspaper article from the Post-Gazette announcing the choice of Cantini for the sculpture.

According to John H. Smith, manager of the building, the Cantini work will be “toward an abstraction in bronze, glass and steel, of a purely decorative nature.” No story or symbolism will be attempted, he added.

Can you imagine the screaming fits that would ensue today if you asked a professional artist for a work “of a purely decorative nature”? Art is supposed to challenge bourgeois assumptions (the art and academic worlds being the last known habitat of the nearly extinct term “bourgeois”) and show us what’s wrong with the world! You can’t make me do that lowbrow arts-festival trash!

We judge art entirely by its utility today. Do you think Dr. Boli is being too harsh on the art world? Let us look at the descriptions of the four exhibits by living artists currently on display at the Carnegie Museum of Art. You may visit the site and read them for yourself if you like, although you should be warned in advance that the Carnegie Museum of Art has the ugliest Web site in the history of museum Web sites.

For this new body of work, Watt partnered with the Pittsburgh Poetry Collective and Carnegie Museum of Art’s educators in engaging workshops that inspired a list of words in response to Western Pennsylvania’s industrial history and present-day concerns.

You will note that words are an important part of this particular work or set of works. We are not to be trusted with our own interpretation of a visual work; we need words to tell us what is important about it.

How do you see yourself, your body, your views, ideas, and experiences as you move within this museum? I want, I demand, I need, I insist.  Andrea Geyer’s Manifest actively acknowledges and embraces the idea that a museum is made of many people: from visitors and staff to artists, we make and remake the museum every single day.

This work is nothing but words. Dr. Boli has made remarks before about works of art that consist entirely of the artist scrawling slogans on a bedsheet, and perhaps some readers thought he was indulging in humorous exaggeration. “I DEMAND THE MUSEUM TO WELCOME MY SMELL MY NOISE MY INADEQUACY AND MY STRUGGLE.” That is the entire text of one of these bedsheet banners, in unadorned black letters. The words are everything; there is nothing else to the art. They are not interesting words. They are not poetic words. They are simply a statement of what the artist thinks is important.

Widening the Lens: Photography, Ecology, and the Contemporary Landscape examines environmental history and degradation, particularly in the American landscape, as well as urgent concerns about climate change, through the camera lens.

Photography is an excellent medium for addressing the problems of modern life; but Dr. Boli would submit that a photograph that needs an introductory statement of principles to be appreciated is not a very good photograph. The curators who mounted the exhibition should have the courage to let the pictures speak, and should stand out of their way while they are speaking.

Launched as a response to the devastation of living reefs due to global warming and ocean acidification, the Crochet Coral Reef resides at the nexus of art, science, and environmentalism.

This is a gorgeous work of art, and it is only a pity that it needs a practical excuse. Furthermore, the excuse dilutes the message. Art that simply celebrates the beauty of the coral reef will make us love that beauty and want to protect it. Art that comes at us with a chip on its shoulder disposes us to place it in a political context of approval or disapproval before we have even seen the art.

Dr. Boli will make a prediction that will make him anathema in the art community: not a single one of these exhibits will fix what’s wrong with the world. But though Virgil Cantini is not Dr. Boli’s favorite Pittsburgh sculptor, he did make the world better, because he made spaces more beautiful. To increase human happiness is the only way to save the world. The only way art can increase human happiness is through beauty, and it is time for us to disclaim any other purpose for it. It is time for us to stand with Oscar Wilde and say, “All art is quite useless.”

INSPIRATIONAL PROVERBS.

A journey of a thousand miles can probably be postponed indefinitely.

If at first you don’t succeed, hire a consultant.

Give a man a fish, and you feed him for a day. Give a man ten fish, and his apartment stinks for a week.

One day at a time eventually adds up to threescore and ten years.

Home is where the bills are.

Faint heart ne’er tumbled into a crevasse while climbing Everest.

Might makes maybe.

Actions speak louder than words if the actor has a tuba.

The enemy of my enemy probably can’t get along with anybody else either.

Today is the first day of your inevitable decline.

ON THIS DAY IN HISTORY.

On this day in 2000, Windows Me was released. Every year on this date, a community of loyal Windows Me users gathers in Krzrnski’s Cafe to open a bottle of Finger Lakes champagne and reminisce about the good old days, although police had to be called to last year’s meeting when one of the users mentioned that he had recently upgraded to Windows XP and found it ran much better on his machine.

WALLPAPER.

A wallpapered room

Are you a house-restorer looking for colored pictures of interiors decorated they way they were when the house you are restoring was built?

Are you a graphic designer looking for ideas for repeating patterns?

Are you a website owner looking for a colorful background to show off your questionable taste in design?

Are you an interior decorator curious about those barbarous days when interiors admitted other colors than beige and off-white?

Are you just nebby?

No matter which of those categories you fall into (and if you fall into none of the others, you surely must fall into the last), you will want to take a look at the latest page in the Eclectic Library, where we have assembled a large collection of catalogues and sample books of wallpaper. This is your chance to catch a glimpse of an alternate universe in which interiors need not be decorated in neutral colors. Spend an hour among these pictures, and your everyday world will seen joyless and drab. But rejoice! You can do something about that! A can of paint, a bucket of paste, and a few rolls of wallpaper can place you among the Edwardian gentility.

ON THIS DAY IN HISTORY.

Yuknoom the Great

Funerary mask of Yuknoom Ch’een II, photographed by Bernard DUPONT. Used under the Creative Commons Attribution Share Alike 2.0 Generic license.


On this day in the year 600, by our calendar, Yuknoom the Great was born. That we have a name, dates, and biography of this Maya ruler—that we know enough about him to call him “the Great”—and that we can do the same for dozens of others: these things should be matters for astonishment and constant celebration, an accomplishment at least as remarkable as the decipherment of Egyptian hieroglyphs or Akkadian cuneiform. Yet it seems not to have penetrated popular culture at all. There is still a curious divide even among the learned: Old World cultures make history, but New World cultures create only anthropology. On his birthday, therefore, Dr. Boli would like to give Yuknoom the Great the gift of acknowledging that he was an individual, a real person who did things, and therefore belongs in the realm of Clio.

THE ADVENT OF ARTIFICIAL KEENNESS.

Here is another opportunity, harvested from the file of tens of thousands of spam comments, to play the game where you look at the product of an article-spinner and try to guess what all the original words were. And if you were worrying about artificial intelligence, Dr. Boli suggests you postpone your worries for a little while longer.

Artificial keenness has started creating images, composition texts, and composing music. What pleasure happen next? Determination robots supersede humans? Is this look-alike created aside concocted intelligence? Cool, isn’t it?

Now here is a somewhat simpler but perhaps more challenging game. All you have to do is read this paragraph:

We bring high-performance innovation and functionality to everyday products that fit seamlessly into your modern life.

And now for the game: if you can find any meaning at all in those words, you win.