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    Back to Art Talk

    Art Talk

    When Artistic Inspiration Becomes Obsession

    Goldman talks about artists’ fascinations that turn into obsession.

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    By Hunter Drohojowska-Philp • Jun 20, 2018 • 3m Listen

    Guilty as charged – until last weekend’s visit to LACMA, I was not aware of a new, important exhibition there: 50 Kitchens by well-known Los Angeles artist, Mark Grotjahn. His 50 large-scale “Butterfly” pencil drawings were conceived as one work and exhibited for the first time. The size of each drawing was made to meet the dimensions of a wall in Grotjahn’s kitchen, hence the title of the whole work, 50 Kitchens.

    Top and Bottom: Installation shot, 50 Kitchens by Mark Grotjahn. LACMA. Photos by Edward Goldman.

    The exquisite colors, amazing craftsmanship, and patience that went into producing this work is rather remarkable. But, I have to admit that after examining the first few drawings, I started to feel less and less engaged. No matter how beautiful the exploration of color demonstrated in these drawings, they started to come across as a touch formulaic – even obsessive.

    Installation photograph, Monet/Lichtenstein: Rouen Cathedrals, Los Angeles County Museum of Art, October 1, 2011 - January 2, 2012, photo © Museum Associates/ LACMA

    memory of another LACMA exhibition under the skylight in the same galleries. In 2011, LACMA managed a near-impossible task, to pair and juxtapose 5 paintings of the Rouen Cathedral by Claude Monet with 5 paintings by Roy Lichtenstein inspired by Monet’s Rouen Cathedrals.

    Left: Rouen Cathedral, Monet. 1894. Image courtesy Wikimedia Commons. Middle: Rouen Cathedral Façade, Sunset, Monet. 1892-94. Image courtesy Wikimedia Commons. Right: Rouen Cathedral, Façade, Morning effect, Monet. 1892-94. Image courtesy Wikimedia Commons.

    Roy Lichtenstein, Rouen Cathedral (Seen at Five Different Times of Day), Set III, 1968-69, The Eli and Edythe L. Broad Collection, © Estate of Roy Lichtenstein. Photo courtesy The Eli and Edythe L. Broad Collection by Douglas M. Parker Studio

    Top and Bottom: Installation shots, 82 Portraits and 1 Still-Life, David Hockney. LACMA. Photos by Edward Goldman.

    82 Portraits and 1 Still-Life. All of the portraits were completed within a span of 3 years; each in the same setting, in the same chair, and finished over a short period of 2-3 days. They come across as a touch formulaic. I know quite well some of the people painted by Hockney, and it seems to me that the artist didn’t explore their unique characters. I wonder, if the artist had allowed himself to spend more time on each portrait, would he have captured more than just a likeness?

    Left: Back of Statue of a Victorious Youth, 300-100 B.C. Bronze. Getty Villa, Los Angeles. Photo by Edward Goldman. Right: Statue of a Victorious Youth, 300–100 B.C., Bronze with inlaid copper. The J. Paul Getty Museum, Los Angeles. Image courtesy The Getty.

    New York Times and the Los Angeles Times wrote articles about an Italian court, once again, ruling that the famous Getty bronze Statue of a Victorious Youth should be repatriated to Italy. This legal battle has been going on for 40 years. Because the sculpture was found by Italian fishermen in international waters, it legally has no archeological connection to Italy. But, that hasn’t stopped the Italians.

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      Hunter Drohojowska-Philp

      Contributor, 'Art Talk'

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      Edward Goldman

      Host, Art Talk

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      Benjamin Gottlieb

      Reporter, Fill-in Host

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      Kathleen Yore

      Audio engineer, KCRW

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