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Yosemite under Orion's gaze

Wednesday, November 26, 2008

Art and History



I am an art dealer. I used to be a rich General Contractor/Real Estate Developer/Art Collector until a Los Angeles Billionaire seduced my father into selling him an apartment project we built and never paid us the twelve million he owed us. The deal was literally written on the back of a cocktail napkin. I went from the high life to the alms bowl in one dramatic swoop. Maybe the last chapter hasn't been written in the saga but that will be a tale for another day.

Anyway like many of us, there came a point in my life where I had to reinvent myself and I became an art dealer. A pretty good one, I might humbly submit. I primarily sell art created from 1890 to 1940, although there are occasional exceptions. I covet the great regionalists, Benton and Grant Wood, printmakers like Spruance, Martin Lewis and Kloss. Love the great Taos, California and Pennsylvania artists, as well. Garber, Kleitsch, Redmond, Redfield, Ufer. Rich for me would be rich enough to buy my own Edward Hopper, one of my absolute top favorites.

I really love great illustration. N.C. Wyeth is another one of the titans of painting. Pyle, Leyendecker, Cornwell, Rockwell, these guys had more talent in one finger than your Rothko or Stella could summon up in a lifetime. Give me a person who works every day for decades mastering a medium over a schmuck like Warhol or Haring or Leichtenstein who keep regurgitating some trite cartoon like idea again and again.

I love some of the great illustrators today that seem to have been forgotten or not given credit for their artistic chops. Matt Mahurin, Marshall Arisman, Robert Giusti, Brad Holland. Tremendous and brilliant, all.

I personally don't collect any more except for the work of my old friend and mentor Rick Griffin. A brilliant, revolutionary artist who purloined from the best of the illustrators and had absolute integrity and consistency in every brushstroke. I watched and worked along side Rick on many projects and he would give every job, no matter how small, the attention that Michelangelo might have bestowed on the Sistine Chapel. Frustrating at times, but utterly beguiling, he feared nothing and treaded where no man has ever dared to tread.


Modern Art is a scam. Rich sheep licking each other's arses. Damien Hirst is the current fraud of the month. Maybe god's way of extricating extra cash from fat bastard's wallets. Jeff Koons, Scharf, Pollock, the list stretches back a mile. I think Basquiat had real talent. I really like Serra. Lucien Freud. Richter. Thiebaud is a freaking god. But most of these guys are carney hucksters. In my opinion. When I was painting in college, we talked about getting anointed by the gay art mafia. Maybe that's not fair, it just always seemed that that was how the game was rigged. The stuff just seemed so snide and cynical and devoid of lasting beauty. And there are real guys out there who will unfortunately never crack the pink ceiling and never find an audience until they are long in the grave.

One day my brother and I stood in front of a broom that a janitor had mistakenly left against a wall at the Museum of Contemporary Art in La Jolla and I did a twenty minute riff on the piece's artistic sensibilities. The nearby docent was none too pleased.

My friend Denis, who is a collector from Oakland, has asked me to write more about art. I plan to start doing posts on current artists that I like. I have never used this website to promote my business and will not start now. But I would like to introduce some artists to you whose work I think is relevant.

11 comments:

grumpy said...

yeah, in general modern art is a scam, of course there are exceptions, as you point out..i walked through the Basquiat show at MOCA in LA a few years ago and left thinking he was a hoax, but after your endorsement i must reconsider...i was a bit surprized at your thumbs down for Pollack, but whatever, i totally agree on the illustrators, Wyeth, Leyendecker, Rockwell, and of course Griffin, all gods in my book...

Anonymous said...

Robert... It is small world... Rick Griffin is a favorite of mine, partly because I surf and I have known about him since I was a kid growing up in Manhattan Beach and he was doing "Murphy" for Surfer magazine at the time, but also because his later work was just incredible.

About a year ago they had an exhibit of his work at the Laguna Art Museum. We went with friends... one of my surf buddies and his wife. My friend had gone to school with Rick at Palos Verdes High School and has a real fondness for his work due to their personal connection.

I also have a great fondness for all of the Wyeth's... I am no artist nor art expert but I think all of their work is fantastic!!!

Anonymous said...

I attended Palomar College in the early 1980's. That's where I met Robert Sommers, along with many other talented artists who have become lifelong friends.
Two of the Art Students were head and shoulders above the rest of us. Mark Ryden and Rory Ransom.
Ryden and Ransom also met at Palomar and became good friends, although their friendship would be short lived.
Mark Ryden went on to Art Center in Pasadena and Rory went on to San Francisco Art Institute.
Ryden became famous for his [surrealistic] illustrations and paintings. He has done numerous album covers, magazine illustrations and now gets six figure payoffs for his paintings. Although I never really got along with him I must agree he is a very talented artist with a twisted sense of humor.
Rory Ransom passed away a few years ago. He died of AIDS.
I remember one day I was at his house when I noticed an odd painting he had done. It was a 5"x7" portrait of himself with a background of postage stamp, entitled 'Male Art' Naively I said to him "aren't you worried somebody might think you're gay?" He just laughed at me and said "if you only knew KJ!" At that time I did not know he was gay, as he was dating a couple of girls at Palomar. A few months later, at the end of his last semester at Palomar, he came out. He thought his close friend Mark Ryden and the art crowd he was running around with would understand. They did not. It was disastrious. Ransom was humiliated by the homophoebic students he thought were his friends. Ryden responded with a art piece for the Student Art Show called 'Roryanaskosi' coined after an IFC film out at that time named 'Koyanaskosi'* [a Hopi term for Life out of Balance *excuse my Hopi spelling-I can never get Hopi names right]
Ransom regrouped, moved on to San Francisco and unfortunately got into the SF gay scene's fast lane and became HIV positive. He told me he was so supressed that when he came out he just jumped into the whole gay scene way too fast and carelessly.
Although he achieved modest fame in the Bay Area Rory Ransom died before his time. There is no doubt in my mind that Rory would of made it to the big payoff like Ryden.

Blue Heron said...

Thanks, Kerry. I will always remember the wild animated movie those guys did, spinning around with the fish coming out of their mouth. Ryden was definitely very talented but their were a lot of talented artists there. I always thought Rory was kind of a Roger Dean wannabee - but I know you liked him a lot. He did a lot of the exterior paintings for Sunset Records I believe. But who did the weird naked pic in the bathroom?

Anonymous said...

Who had the pencil in the bathroom?.............

Blue Heron said...

stop it...

Anonymous said...

Rory was young, at times reckless, and in an innocent way a little bit immature, maybe too young to take his trade seriously. Compareing him to a Rodger Dean wanna-be is a compliment.
Before he passed away he did a great stage backdrop for a San Francisco production of Jesus Christ Superstar.
He started hanging around S.F.s established artists and becomming much more sophisticated with his choice of art.
One last comment. Rory always gave back to the art community.
KJ

Anonymous said...

I'm not definitely not knocking him. He was always nice to me. A talented renderer. Tragic.

Unknown said...

does kj (aka anonymous) know that roger dean is NOT jimmy dean's little brother?

Blue Heron said...

he's afraid they'll cut off his sausage supply...

Cindy said...

I'm very sad to read Rory passed.. I new him years ago.. I lived in Carlsbad back in the early 80's.. Had a crush on him.. Sort of dated.. But always suspected then he was gay.. He was so jovial.. And full of life! When I moved back to New England.. He gave me 2 paintings I still have.. RIP My friend..