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Transcript of Soul-Beating
Soul-BeatingAuthor(s): David ReedSource: Art Journal, Vol. 69, No. 4 (Winter 2010), pp. 96-107Published by: College Art AssociationStable URL: http://www.jstor.org/stable/25800367 .
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Philip Guston, The Small Panels, 1968-70, oil on Masonite, installation view, Philip Guston
Studio, Woodstock, New York (artwork ? The Estate of Philip Guston; photograph provided by McKee Gallery, New York)
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David Reed
Soul-Beating
When you paint things they change into something else, something totally unpredictable. -PHILIP GUSTON
I was a student at the New York Studio School during the fall of 1966 and spring of 1967.The school was then located in a loft building on the northeast corner
of Broadway and Bleecker Street. Draft deferments during the Vietnam War were
not granted to students attending an art school, especially an unac
credited one like the Studio School. But because I was still enrolled
at Reed College in Portland, Oregon, and came to New York on a
Rockefeller Foundation Fellowship, I was safe. I studied with Mercedes
Matter, Charles Cajori, Esteban Vicente, and especially Milton Resnick,
among others. Frank Stella, Gandy Brody, Alfred Leslie, and others gave talks at the school. It was quite an immersion in New York painting culture for
an idealistic would-be-painter from San Diego.
After finishing my last year at Reed College in the fall of 1968,1 returned
to New York. Mercedes Matter gave me a job organizing the library at the Studio
Schools new location, the old Whitney Museum building at 8 West Eighth Street.
I bought books and organized them into categories. At the time, Maurice Merleau
Ponty's essay "Cezanne's Doubt" was a kind of bible to me. I was aware of the
difficulties and contradictions involved in the study of painting and put up a sign with a quote from Paul Cezanne: "If you ever founded a school in my name, you have not understood nor even cared about what I have done."1 Morton Feldman
was the dean in those years. In his lectures he often told stories about his friend
ship with Philip Guston. Even though I was no longer a student there, when
Guston came to the school for a special group critique, Mercedes invited me to
bring my paintings and later allowed me to join his special seminar.
Like the other students, I saw Guston as a legendary figure with a special
history and aura, and was very excited that he was coming to the school. I didn't
see his show, Philip Guston: Recent Paintings and Drawings, in the winter of 1966 at the
Jewish Museum, but I studied the catalogue so closely that I began to imagine that I had seen it, only in my memory the show's location was changed to the
Guggenheim Museum. The show was of abstract paintings in black and white
with pink and pale blue, but since I only saw the catalogue, in which the repro ductions are in black and white, I imagined all the paintings as black and white.
The paintings suggested images to me. I saw a painter working at an easel in one
of them. In the catalogue the paintings become more and more simplified, until
there is only a single painterly black rectangle remaining in the last canvases: a
dead end (Air II, 196c, May Sixty-Five, 196c, and Arrival, 1965). In my mind's eye I
still see Air II as the last painting, at the bottom of the ramp at the Guggenheim Museum. Mark Rothko pulled down the shade, Barnett Newman closed the door,
Ad Reinhardt turned out the lights, and now Guston seemed to have removed all
forms but one. Rumors were circulating that Guston had moved away from New
York and had abandoned painting. After that last painting in the show, how could
he continue?
So there was excitement as we placed our paintings around the walls of
the large drawing studio on the second floor in expectation of Guston's arrival.
We then crowded in to hear what Guston would say about our works. The paint
ings I brought to the critique were landscapes painted during the two previous
The epigraph is from "Philip Guston Talking," in
Philip Guston: With a Lecture Given by Philip Guston at the University of Minnesota in March 1978, ed.
Renee McKee (London: Timothy Taylor Gallery,
2004), 32.
I. I have found references by several authors
agreeing with the meaning of this statement and
have found other statements by Cezanne which are close in meaning, but, after all these years, I have been unable to locate my direct source.
Probably it comes from the collections of quota tions attributed to Cezanne by Emile Bernard,
Joachim Gasquet, or Leo Larguier.
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summers in the desert of the Southwest, on the Navajo Reservation. Some were
on stretchers leaning against the wall, and others were on loose canvas and just
pinned up. Guston roamed around the center of the room looking at the works, while
we moved to the side to give him space. He was silent for a long time, examin
ing what he saw, and then to our consternation, began to speak very critically, very negatively about the work. This was not what we anticipated. We thought that we were standing up for the values he shared and expected praise. But like
many art schools, the Studio School had developed a house style, a combination
of the influences of our teachers and their idols: Cezanne and Alberto Giacometti, mixed with our teachers' teacher, Hans Hofmann.To our surprise, Guston was
extremely outspoken in his denunciation of these influences and the stylizations that he saw as coming from them. He especially criticized areas of the paintings in which original lines or painted areas were partially erased or smudged and
then redrawn. He said that this was cheating; we had to make up our minds
about what we were doing. He saw the use of these doubled and erased lines as
a way of avoiding decisions. He picked out the work of two painters who were
accomplished in this school style and was harsh in his criticism of their work.
This was especially upsetting because their paintings were admired and imitated
by the other students. Referring, I think, to Minimal painting, he said that their
paintings were like "stripe paintings," something completely anathema to what we thought we supported at the Studio School. He then went on to make his
larger point. He said that Piet Mondrian had "eliminated everything but the
rhythm to keep his paintings from being tragic."2 But he asked, "Should painting be tragic?" Clearly he thought it should be. He then said that in modern times
art was schizophrenic, meaning that art was removed from life. He saw the
influences of the school's painting tradition as something that was removing us
from our own lives and the world in which we lived. Speaking of Mondrian's
grids in relation to the cross structures in Piero della Francesca's paintings, he
said that in Piero's paintings, "Christ is both dead and resurrected, flesh and
spirit. . . . It's a simple manger and the Son of God." "In the Renaissance," he
said, "men were together with their lives, both tragic and saved." Then he went
on to say that Piero was not just a Renaissance painter. He spoke about how Piero
laid on the paint in quick, rough marks. At the time I didn't really understand
this, since I was thinking of Piero's oil paintings, but Bill Berkson has clarified for me how Guston was visualizing Piero's frescoes, in which the marks had to
be put down quickly before the plaster dried.
Looking back now, I can see that despite my misgivings at the time about the school style, I had fallen for it. So I am surprised now and was surprised then that Guston picked out my paintings as the exception to the other work.
He pointed to my painting of a tree, and said that it reminded him of Piero's trees. I had brought to the critique several paintings of a tree near a spring and the shack in which I lived in the desert. My paintings were thickly painted, more
like Vincent van Gogh or Chaim Soutine than Piero. Often, at the end of the
day, I would throw down my dirty brushes and paint directly with my fingers. Guston picked the painting that had more of the white ground showing and which was more thinly painted in some areas. How, I still wonder, with the dis similarities in surface and style, could Guston have recognized Piero's influence
2.1 transcribed the quotations in this paragraph in my notes on the seminar, and I also trans ferred them to a notebook. I still have notes and notebook.
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the (artwork
VflflHBIB on my painting? How could he see from my paintings that while I was living in the desert I had been obsessed with Piero's paintings? He called me forward and told me that he had once talked to a conservator who held Piero's Flagellation from the Ducal Palace in Urbino in his hands. Tears streamed down Guston's
cheeks as he spoke about the painting. He said that Piero's paintings have no
understandable scale: one can't tell if the distances between objects in the paint
ings are miles or inches. He said that there was no way to describe the relation
of the group around Christ to the group of figures on the right in the Flagellation. Piero did not belong to any time, but was "a messenger from heaven."
While I was making those paintings of the tree on the Navajo Reservation in
Oljato, I was writing a letter to the San Diego draft board and studying the trees in Piero's fresco cycle in the Basilica of San Francesco, Arezzo.The frescoes are
based on the legend of the True Cross. I had reproductions of the frescoes in
several large paperback books from the series I Maestri del colore, and Forma e colore,
which I had brought back from earlier travels in Italy, and also Kenneth Clark's edition of the complete paintings.3 In my letter to the draft board I claimed that
this study led to understandings in my paintings that prevented me from going to fight in Vietnam?one of the stranger arguments, I'm sure, ever heard by a
draft board in support of an application for conscientious objector status. Piero's
frescos, based on Jacobus de Voragine's medieval text The Golden Legend, tell the
story of the True Cross: a tree and the wood from that tree. Following Adam's
3. Kenneth Clark, Piero della Francesco: Complete Edition (London and New York: Phaidon, 1951).
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MMAUV,46 I
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Piero della Francesca, The Flagellation, 1447, oil and tempera on panel, 23 x 32/s in.
(58.4 x 81.5 cm). Galleria Nazionale delle Marche, Urbino (artwork in the public domain; photo graph by Mauro Magliani, provided by Alinari/Art
Resource, NY)
Piero della Francesca, Death of Adam and Adoration of the Sacred Piece of Wood, from
Legend of the True Cross, ca. 1450-65, frescos, postrestoration, approx. 12 ft. 9 in. high (390 cm), and approx. I I x 13 ft. (336 x 400 cm). S. Francesco, Arezzo (artwork in the public domain; photographs provided by Scala/Ministero
per i Beni e le Attivita culturali/Art Resource, NY)
death, God gives his despairing son a branch from the Tree of Knowledge in the Garden of Eden to plant in Adam's mouth. The wood that grows from this
sapling is sometimes recognized and goes through various adventures before it
is used to make the cross on which Christ is crucified. Seeing his still corpse, Adam's children, unfamiliar with death, must have asked: where did he go? Into the tree, is, I think, Piero's answer. In the fresco, Adam's daughter screams before
a tree, her arms thrown out over the motionless corpse of Adam. This, I thought, was a painter's interpretation of Christianity. Piero does not paint the crucifixion
itself in his fresco cycle. For him it is how spirit survives in matter that is impor tant. For Piero, I believe, the release of Adam's spirit, immanent in the wood,
rather than Jesus's sacrifice, is the significance of the crucifixion. Perhaps anyone
could have released Adam's spirit in the wood. Piero doesn't use the standard
iconography in which the skull at the base of the cross is Adam's, and Christ's blood on the skull is God's grace. In these paintings, Christ is the second Adam
redeeming the first.
During those summers of painting in the desert, I imagined that the tree
that I was painting at the spring in Oljato contained this immanent spirit. At the
time, I wasn't aware how much I was influenced by the content of earlier land
scape paintings and photographs in which the American West was depicted as a
Garden of Eden. I saw this bright green tree, filled with light in the midst of the
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id
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David Reed, Oljato (Entrance), 1967, oil on canvas mounted on masonite, 26^4 x 24 in. (66.7 x 61 cm). Collection of the artist (artwork ? David Reed)
David Reed, Oljato (Tree), 1967, oil on canvas on masonite, 24 x 225/s in. (61 x 57.5
cm). Collection of the Roswell Museum and Art
Center.Roswell, New Mexico (artwork ? David
Reed)
dry desert, as the Tree of Knowledge. But living on the reservation and reading about the culture of the Navajos and the Hopi, I didn't think that this American
Garden of Eden was uninhabited. In the Navajo language, Oljato means "moon
light water." A band of Navajos chased by Kit Carson and American troopers had
found this water that saved them when, coming over the mesa at night, they saw
the spring near my shack reflected in the moonlight. I loved Franz Kafka's retell
ing of the story of the Garden of Eden: we are really still in the Garden, just fooled by God into thinking that we are in exile.
Driven by our love of Italian painting, Guston and I would later one after
noon escape the Studio School to go to the old Academy of Music, a huge ruin
of a movie theater on Fourteenth Street, to see one of Sergio Leone's spaghetti
Westerns, For a Few Dollars More. We spoke about the similarities between Piero's
landscapes and landscapes in the movie and the violence in both. I had first seen these movies in Venice and had always connected them with Italian paint
ing. In Piero's fresco The Slaying of the Son of Chosroes, in Arezzo, the son of Chosroes
falls back, stabbed in his throat, the red strap of his helmet severing his neck.
The emblem of a flower blooms on his helmet, and his mouth is under a cross, which seems to absorb his spirit. Above him, on the other side of an empty throne, a crowing cock stands on a column. The silence of the transformative
violence in Piero's fresco reminded me of Leone's shootouts. Guston must have
also liked Leone's close-ups of faces and objects. That day, a large hole?a walk
through opening?had been cut into the right side of the screen at the Academy of Music. We also visited the Frick Collection to see Piero's paintings there. A
guard asked us to leave, accusing Guston of "lecturing" in front of Goya's The
Forge. Guston thought that this painting and Rembrandt's The Polish Rider were the most realistic paintings in the Frick, the most human?at least on that day.
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When he spoke to us about our work, why did Guston insist that painting be tragic?
Looking back, it is easy to see that his comments were in relation to the transition
going on in his own work. At the time, none of us knew anything of his new
drawings and paintings that depicted simple objects. In the school's upstairs stu
dio, where he worked as a resident artist, I later was able to glimpse some of the
drawings. I was amazed by this transformation in his work. But I don't think that
this shift to depicted objects was the only cause for what he said. Piero wasn't
tragic because his work was figurative, and Mondrian wasn't tragic because his
paintings were abstract. Guston's work always had aspects of both figuration and abstraction, shifting back and forth between the two. Once I told him that I
thought an "abstract" painting of his I had seen in Buffalo at the Albright-Knox Art Gallery (perhaps it was Untitled 19C8, #47 in Fort Worth retrospective) was
based on Jean-Antoine Watteau's L'Embarquement pour 1'ile de Cythere.4 Guston said that
I had found him out. The way he depicted objects in his work was a surprise. There was a cartoon aspect to his imagery that at the time seemed related to the use of cartoons in Pop art. This made many of the artists of his generation angry
(with the exception of Willem de Kooning, who told Guston that he liked the new paintings). To other painters, it seemed that Guston was defecting to the
enemy, a younger generation of artists who had driven out and replaced the sec
ond-generation New York school painters who had expected to inherit the mantle
of the Abstract Expressionists. I don't think Mercedes approved of Guston's new
work, and Feldman, at the time, was quite outspoken about Guston's betrayal.
Combining Pop and abstraction is currently so accepted in the New York
art world, that it is hard to imagine how controversial the change in Guston's
work was at the time. The Pop aspect of his new work, like the figuration, didn't
bother me. But this is the place, I think, to confess how much I was troubled
by his new paintings. I was most unnerved by their changed surfaces. It was
the crudeness of the paintings that bothered me. His earlier paintings were so
elegant and poetic. Now I realize that this new surface was a byproduct of the
change that Guston was going through?evidence of the tragic. He was painting
directly from and in relation to his life, without any stylizations, and without
artiness. My colleague Fabian Marcaccio calls these later works of Guston's real
ist, and the surface is realistic and matter-of-fact, in a way that is beyond being
figurative or cartoonlike. Fabian describes them as being painted with grease instead of paint. Guston shows how the world is, revealing himself fully: his
smoking and eating, fears and obsessions. Another colleague, Klaus Merkel, calls
the surfaces of these paintings cruel, and they certainly are. And Guston himself
is cruel in the paintings. Through the surface he implicates himself as a sinner, not just accuses others of sin.
If it wasn't just a shift to figuration, what did Guston mean by the tragic?
My other favorite teacher at the Studio School in those years was Resnick. He
told me about a phrase used by his painter colleagues that can perhaps explain further what Guston meant. It was a phrase that Resnick used to describe the
method and difficulties of an artist changing his or her work: "soul-beating." He said that some artists could "beat their own souls," but some could not,
and needed someone else to do the beating for them, a friend or an enemy. If
I understand correctly, I think that by soul Milton meant all the traditions and
4. Michael Auping, exhibition checklist in Philip Guston: Retrospective, exh. cat. (London: Modern Art Museum of Fort Worth and Thames and
Hudson, 2003). Auping organized the exhibition for the Fort Worth museum. Number 47 on the
checklist, reproduced in the book, is Untitled,
1958, oil on canvas, 64 x 75 Vs inches, Private collection.
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beliefs from the past that affect our thinking. For Resnick, spirit was the opposite of and had nothing to do with soul. As an artist, one had to learn to be critical
of one's beliefs and the traditions that one cared so much about, had to learn to
push on from those beliefs into something else.
Guston, at the time he spoke with us, was trying to do this for himself, to
change himself. He was exceptionally open both in his critique and later in the
seminar. Unsure of himself and what he was doing, he was never acting a part,
though his resemblance to a character from a Fellini film told me that putting on
a show would have been easy for him. In the Studio School style, Guston saw the
traditions that he was trying to beat from his soul. I think that this is why Piero's
Flagellation came to his mind and why it was so moving for him to speak about
that painting. It was an image of his own current soul-beating. Thinking about
this now, I see his Ku Klux Klan hoods with their whips in a new way. These are
soul-beater artists at work: the tragic in operation. Guston implicates himself in
the evildoings of the KKK hoods. Berkson reminded us that "the image is adapted as well from seeing Piero's members of the confraternity the Misericordia, who wore their hoods?black where the Klan's are white?to keep their identities
secret, but out of charity and self-effacement rather than hatred and fear."5 Many
other images in Guston's paintings could be related to soul-beating: the nails, the clubs, and the bricks and stones, which are like the stone St. Jerome used to
beat himself in the desert. I especially like the paintings in which all the objects are swept away by floods of blood. But I should be clear: I mean that these are
objects of soul-beating in an artistic sense only, without the usual iconographic,
religious meanings?they are images of how a painter can use painting to
change him- or herself. The books in Guston's paintings are also tools for this
soul-beating. In the critique he recommended that we read Roberto Longhi on
Piero, Osvald Siren on Chinese aesthetics and philosophy, Charles Baudelaire's
writing, and Eugene Delacroix's journals. I saw more of these later paintings of Guston's at the openings and shows
in the 1970s at David McKee Gallery in the Barbizon Hotel for Women on East
Sixty-third Street. Guston came to these openings, which were attended almost
exclusively by young artists. It was the young artists who understood in those
years what he was doing. I often see prints or drawings by Guston in the studios of artist colleagues. For example, I recently saw a beautiful print in David Row's
studio. During the 1970s, another painter colleague, Jake Berthot, told a story that he had heard from the artist. Guston had run into de Kooning by chance in a supermarket in Long Island, both of them pushing their carts. De Kooning in
his high-pitched voice asked, "Well, how does it feel, Phil? How does it feel?" Guston said that he didn't understand: "How does what feel, Bill?" "Well, how
does it feel?" de Kooning said, "They used to copy me and now they copy you." And then he added, "Isn't it strange. It's the part that you are least sure of, that's the part they copy." De Kooning understood transformation through painting
well. In his 19C0 painting Excavation, he signed his name as the teeth of a skull in
the bottom right of the painting?Adam's skull. In the center of the painting, a door is ajar, as if he had walked through it and discarded his old self. During Guston's critique, in some way, not very consciously, I must have gotten the mes
sage about this transformation through painting. There's a final sentence in my notebook entry: "... have to do it in NY, so not just done in Southwest."
5. Bill Berkson, "Guston, Piero, and Their
Followers," talk presented at American Academy Rome, Villa Aurelia, Rome, May 25, 2010, rep. Philip Guston: The Late Work (Rome: American
Academy in Rome and Museo Carlo Bilotti, 201 1)4-5.
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Philip Guston, Untitled, from The Small
Panels, 1969, oil on panel, 12 x 14 in. (30.5 x 35.6 cm). Private collection (artwork ? The Estate of Philip Guston; photograph provided by McKee Gallery, New York)
Another aspect of Guston s paintings from around 1968 and 1969 especially inter ests me now: his use of a white ground behind the objects in his paintings. I
suspect that he was inspired to use these grounds after seeing the paintings of
James Ensor, who was perhaps the first to use them. In his early portraits, Ensor
often has a source of light, a window or a light-colored wall, behind a figure (e.g., The Somber Lady, 1881, and The Lamp-Lighter, 1880). What is strange about the light in
Ensor s paintings is that there seems to be no source for the light from outside the
painting; instead, the light seems to be a screen with a certain thickness inside the painting. The light is strangely artificial. Later this white light changes from the
visionary light of his early religious paintings into the harsh, satiric light of the white grounds in his late works. In those works, it is as if we see the world in the harsh spotlight of an interrogation. Guston's white light works in a similar way.
Guston's white grounds isolate the objects, obfuscating their context.This
isolation emphasizes the particular qualities of the depicted objects?their dis tinct shapes, colors, and dimensions. In the alphabet paintings, there is some
times just one object, and this separates the object from others even further. Each
object is reduced to a potential linguistic element. Because of its resemblance to
the white paper backgrounds of cartoons, the white ground makes that relation
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- 4V
Philip Guston, Mirror?to S. K., I960, oil on
canvas, 63 x 743/4 in. (160 x 190 cm). Collection Louisiana Museum of Modern Art, Humlebaek, Denmark (artwork ? The Estate of Philip Guston;
photograph provided by McKee Gallery, New
York)
stronger. But the white ground also does something else. As Berkson writes, the
white puts the objects into "the in-between-ness that Guston painted?where the
'thing' is visibly turning into or shows the capability of being other [the piece of bread into shoe into moon ... as Guston said], something else."6 The white
ground creates a screen of light, a theatrical and filmic light, in which objects are
uncanny and seem capable of transformation. It makes the ordinary seem strange.
Why is there such a focus on that ordinary thing?that coffee cup, painting, easel, or chair? One has the feeling that it is because something strange is happening within that object. The white ground can also be seen as some kind of reflected
light that obscures the world around the object. This can sometimes make the
objects seem as if they were reflections in a mirror, not belonging where they are.
When this sense of strangeness and potential transformation is repeated in 6. Berkson e-mail to the author, June 15, 2010.
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many different objects, and in many paintings, it seems to be a way of seeing the
world and implicates the painter in the change. In the quotation in my epigraph, Guston speaks about objects changing into something else when he paints them.
I keep misreading the quotation to say: "When you paint things they change you into something else, something totally unpredictable." It's not just the objects themselves that change; the painter himself or herself can also change through this
process. A i960 painting by Guston, Mirror?to S. K., acts out this process, depicting
what this kind of transformation might be like. One can see the figure of the
painter in the right foreground looking at himself, his shape, reflected in a mirror.
There are wonderful pale pink strokes of paint over a surrounding black area
connecting the painter and his reflected image. The shapes of the painter and his
reflection seem both pulled together and different with that light between them.
When we look at ourselves in the mirror, it is a way to test our identity and
decide if we have changed. Guston must be thinking of this experience in this
painting and wondering how painting might be changing him. Now we also
look at films, video, computers, and other screens of light, along with mirrors, to test our identity. We can identify with the figures on the screen and through them recognize parts of ourselves that we desire or parts that we might not want
to acknowledge. I keep thinking of Bela Lugosi as Dracula in Tod Browning's film,
knocking down the silver mirrored cigarette case (which looks like a computer) when it exposes him as a vampire. I feel that while watching movies we also
change into a creature like Dracula; parts of us are still in our lives, and parts,
through our identifications, are something else. Like the vampire, we are part alive
and part dead. Through seeing ourselves reflected in the media, we are changing. There are great pleasures and some terrors in experiencing these screen presences.
We are still human?this process can feel very human?but sometimes I fear
that we are changing from human to something else. Painting can explore these
changes in this age of media. The vampire's kiss of the media of mechanical
reproduction, which was thought to be the death of painting, rather than killing
painting, has made it immortal. With its history and conceptual possibilities, and
in combination with media, painting can explore how we are being changed. What parts of being human should be preserved? How are we being changed?
In his 196c text, "Piero della Francesca: The Impossibility of Painting," Guston writes of the Flagellation: "Possibly it is not a 'picture' we see, but the pres
ence of a necessary and generous law"7 That is quite a phrase: necessary and
generous law. The law in Kafka is certainly not generous. What does Guston
mean? This necessary and generous law might be the transformation of objects and of ourselves that he discovered through painting and in Piero's work. Guston
goes on to say that we have to doubt the final outcome of these transformations.
We do. Perhaps this is the tragic.
Born in San Diego in 1946, David Reed studied at the Studio School and in 1971 moved permanently to lower Manhattan, where he continues to live and work. His recent exhibitions have been at Galerie
Schmidt Maczollek in Cologne and Peter Blum Soho in New York (works on paper). In March 2010 he
will have an exhibition of paintings (along with photographs by William Eggleston) at Peter Lund in Oslo.
Recent publications of his work include Tony Godfrey's Painting Today (Phaidon, 2009) and his own Rock
Paper Scissors (Kienbaum Artists' Books, 2009).
7. Philip Guston, "Piero della Francesca: The
Impossibility of Painting," Art News 64, no. 3 (May
1965): 39.
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