"Magritte and Contemporary Art" is on view at the Los Angeles County Museum of Art through March 4, 2007.
Besides being included in this exhibit, John Baldessari helped design it. The homage to Magritte is apparent in the way that he, too, hides his subject's identity. Whereas Magritte might have someone turn away, Baldessari in the 1980s painted circles over faces in the news photographs or old movie stills in his work. The noses seen here are a variation on that idea, with different colors so the viewer can imagine the subject in different moods (red for dangerous, blue for hopeful, etc.).
It's all pretty crude, and intentionally
so. The photo reproduction
is grainy, the painting
amateurish; even the moods are
color-coded cliches. Baldessari is
associated with Conceptual Art,
a misnomer or, at any rate, ironic
because it implies intellectual
elitism. He likes pictures that are
"dumb," he says. Art should be
"mute and stupid and not about
parading . . . virtuosity."
Conceptualism was a reaction against Abstract Expressionism, which emphasized sensibility and originality. Like other Conceptualists, Baldessari has made his art from debased materials, forgotten pop-culture references and deadpan humor. He wants to remain as anonymous as the B-movie actors in his work
[Originally published in West Magazine : November 26, 2006, p.13]