Showing posts with label Aesthetics. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Aesthetics. Show all posts

Sunday, August 11, 2019

Yoshitoshi, Spirit and Spectacle at the Philadelphia Museum of Art


 Yoshitoshi, Spirit and Spectacle


Philadelphia Museum of Art 
April 16 - August 18, 2019

Reviewed by Ed Voves

Like Janus, the two-faced Roman god, Tsukioka Yoshitoshi looked back on Japan's past, while visualizing its future. Yoshitoshi (1839-1892) was the last great master of traditional Japanese woodblock prints. He also created stunning works of art which served as the prototypes of Mango, the now universally-popular Japanese art form.

Yoshitoshi's woodblock prints are the subject of a fascinating exhibition, Yoshitoshi, Spirit and Spectacle, now in its final week, at the Philadelphia Museum of Art.  Nearly the entire exhibit comes from the collection of the Philadelphia Museum of Art, which has one of the richest holdings of Japanese art outside of Japan.

In a year marked by spectacular exhibitions of Japanese art in the U.S., it is difficult to keep up with this "embarrassment" of riches. It is vital, all the same, to view the Philadelphia Museum of Art exhibit. This splendid assessment of Yoshitoshi 's life and career also brilliantly surveys the craft techniques which went into carving and printing the memorable images of Japan, past and present, which Yoshitoshi created.



Anne Lloyd, Photo (2019)
Picture of Kanagi Toshikage's Memorial Portrait of Taiso (Tsukioka) Yoshitoshi, 1892

Born in 1839, Yoshitoshi was just on the brink of manhood when Commodore Matthew Perry, U.S. Navy, sailed into Tokyo Bay on July 8, 1853. Perry's orders were to force the Japanese to open their ports to American ships and trade. Combining diplomatic bluff and target practice with the modern naval artillery mounted on his ships, Perry succeeded in his "open door" mission. With the coming of Perry's squadron, life in Japan, the Japan of Yoshitoshi's childhood, changed forever.

The second "red-letter" date in Yoshitoshi's life was the year 1868, by which time he was already highly regarded as an artist. In 1868, the dynamic, young Emperor Meiji succeeded in curtailing the rule of the Tokugawa shogunate. For several centuries, the Emperor of Japan had been little more than a figurehead, while Japanese society languished in a state of feudalism where everyone knew their place - and was expected to keep it.

The most famous form of Japanese woodblock prints was popularly known as Ukiyo-e, the "floating world." Nothing seemed to change in the colorful, magical realm of Ukiyo-e. Then, between 1853 and 1868, Japan ceased to float. It was full-steam ahead and artists like Yoshitoshi had to adapt.

Yoshitoshi learned the art of Ukiyo-e from one of the great practitioners of the genre, Utagawa Kuniyoshi (1797-1861). Kuniyoshi was renowned for his skill at depicting Samurai warriors and military regalia. He was also a master of the macabre side of Japanese folklore and mythology. His scene of a monstrous skeleton specter, summoned by the sorceress, Takiyasha, to haunt an enemy during the ancient Heian era, is one of the most famous illustrations of ghost stories in Japanese art.

Yoshitoshi was very much an artist in the Kuniyoshi mode early in his career – and not always for the better. Yet, despite the derivative and uneven quality of many of Yoshitoshi’s early works, he demonstrated his skill with a number of masterpieces. One of these is a combined three-sheet image, General Masakiyo at Shinshū Castle during the Invasion of Korea in 1590. The date of this work is particularly significant:1863.

In August of that year, a British naval squadron bombarded the port of Kagoshima in reprisal for the attack on a party of British travelers by armed members of the Satsuma-clan. The resulting battle demonstrated the superiority of Britain’s modern naval firepower over the bravery of the Japanese defenders.



Tsukioka Yoshitoshi,
 General Masakiyo at Shinshū Castle during the Invasion of Korea in 1590

Yoshitoshi’s print hearkens back to an earlier war against foreigners, in this case the invasion of Korea by a large army of Samurai warriors in 1590. It is a deliberately traditional battle piece, almost anachronistic in style and technique. Yoshitoshi emphasizes the ancient warrior code of the Samurai amid the ferocity of combat.

There is also a remarkable twist to the scene, revealing the tension between the intrusive forces of the modern, Western world and the time-honored conventions of Japanese society in 1863.

In the right hand corner of General Masakiyo at Shinshū Castle, Yoshitoshi places the image of St. Paul’s Cathedral in London, partly shrouded by the smoke from the battlefield. 


Anne Lloyd, Photo (2019) Detail of Tsukioka Yoshitoshi's 
 General Masakiyo at Shinshū Castle during the Invasion of Korea in 1590

If this had been intended as an historical work only, then Yoshitoshi would have depicted a fortress in the style of the late 1500’s rather than St. Paul's. Instead, he conflates past and present, reminding his audience that Japan had often to struggle against foreign military forces in battles where courage alone was not enough to guarantee victory.

However much a Western art lover may appreciate General Masakiyo at Shinshū Castle, another 1863 work lingers in the memory of those fortune to see it. This sensational print also illustrates a story from Japan's past. The effect is very modern, given the simplicity and clarity of the design. The brilliant cropping which we see in The Twelfth‑Century Shogun Minamoto Yoritomo Releasing a Thousand Cranes at the Beach at Yuigahama points to the effect that Japanese woodblock prints were shortly to have on the Impressionist artists in the West.



Anne Lloyd, Photo (2019)
 Tsukioka Yoshitoshi's The Twelfth‑Century Shogun Minamoto Yoritomo Releasing a Thousand Cranes at the Beach at Yuigahama,1863

Yoshitoshi's skill was thus evident from early-on. However, his emphasis on sensational episodes and plenty of blood and gore in many of his other early works backfired.


Anne Lloyd, Photos (2019)
Tsukioka Yoshitoshi's Aizu Kōmon Kagekatsu, Examining a Head, 1868

Initially popular, Yoshitoshi’s violent and disturbing prints were increasingly rejected by the public and then by publishers. In 1871, he had an emotional breakdown and was living in poverty, supported by his mistress, Okoto, who sold her jewels and rich clothes to support him.

Why did such a talented artist come to this impasse so early in his career? Yoshitoshi’s art reflected the violence, verging on anarchy, into which Japan had descended following Commodore Perry’s arrival in 1853. Various factions vied for control of the country, some in favor of a strong Western-oriented government controlled by the Emperor, others supporting the feudal Shogunate and traditional society.

Yoshitoshi was caught in the cross-fire of Japan's "time of troubles" and his art suffered. Eventually, Yoshitoshi pulled himself out of his despair and started creating prints which helped regain some of his lost prominence. Ironically, it was the popularity of the newspaper industry and the need for illustrations which revived his career. The modernity encouraged by the victorious Emperor Meiji rescued Yoshitoshi from a downward spiral into oblivion.

Yoshitoshi changed his name to Taiso which means “great resurrection. He began to create scenes of Japan and of the Japanese people adapting to Western ways. Yoshitoshi's depictions of his countrymen in Western garb have a curious quality, charming in some respects, faintly absurd in others, as in his group portrait of the Emperor Meiji's generals  in French-style uniforms.



Tsukioka Yoshitoshi, I Want to Cancel My Subscription; Woman Reading Newspaper



Anne Lloyd, Photo (2019) Detail of Tsukioka Yoshitoshi's 
 Famous Soldiers of Japan (Heroes of the Satsuma Rebellion),1878

Yoshitoshi, despite pandering to the Meiji-era obsession to appear up-to-date with Western ways, remained devoted to the exacting standards of Ukiyo-e. His mature style preserved much of the authentic culture of Japan. 

When we study the color woodcut on three panels (triptych) selected as the signature image for the exhibition by the Philadelphia Museum curators, we are looking at a work of art of the highest caliber. Created in 1883, Yoshitoshi's The Heian Poet Yasumasa Playing the Flute by Moonlight, Subduing the Bandit Yasusuke with His Music is worthy of comparison with any major artist of the West during the same  period.


Tsukioka Yoshitoshi, The Heian Poet Yasumasa Playing the Flute by Moonlight, Subduing the Bandit Yasusuke with His Music, 1883

Learning about the laborious step-by-step process by which a Yoshitoshi's masterpiece was created is a revelation. An outstanding short film and a complete sequence of printed sheets is on view in Yoshitoshi: Spirit and Spectacle. The astonishing regimen of artistic vision and the patient, almost unnerving, skill used in carving the sequence of printing blocks is presented in a readily comprehensible survey.



Anne Lloyd, Photo (2019) Photo of the short film at the Yoshitoshi, Spirit & Spectacle exhibition, showing the techniques used in Japanese woodblock printing


Anne Lloyd, Photo (2019) Gallery view of the Yoshitoshi exhibition, showing  a display of the stages of making woodblock prints with the technique used by Yoshitoshi.

According to the excellent exhibit commentary, the woodblock printing process involved the commissioning of an image by a patron (increasingly newspaper or book publishers). When the artist finished the drawing, it was given to a woodcarver who created a block for each color in the picture and one for the black outline. Used in sequence, the color-saturated blocks produced the finished print.

The standard size sheet of paper used for woodblock prints, called an oban, was 15 by 11 inches. Large compositions were made by positioning two, three or more prints, side-by-side, just as artists in Medieval and Renaissance Europe had painted diptychs or triptychs. This means of course that the labor of carving blocks would have doubled or tripled (or more!) for these large multi-sheet prints!

To create a color woodcut triptych like The Heian Poet Yasumasa Playing the Flute by Moonlight is collaborative effort of the highest order. Yet not even Yoshitoshi in his prime could always achieve such a near state of perfection. In the same year, he and the master wood carver, Horikō Yamamoto tō, boldly tried a winter-themed triptych of three beautiful women in traditional garb, set against a snowy landscape. Dealing with much more subtle shades of misty grays and light blues, it was not possible to achieve the seamless effect of the Yasumasa triptych. But Yoshitoshi and his colleague came astonishingly close to complete success!



Anne Lloyd, Photos (2019), 
Yoshitoshi's Winter: Maboroshidayū with Snow Rabbit at Daishorō, 1883

Yoshitoshi did achieve perfection with his series, One Hundred Aspects of the Moon (1885–92). The Philadelphia Museum of Art owns a complete set of these woodblock prints, each featuring a view of the Moon, set against an incredible diversity of stories and settings.



Anne Lloyd, Photo (2019) Gallery view of the Yoshitoshi exhibition, 
showing the display of the One Hundred Aspects of the Moon print series.

Twenty-four of the One Hundred Aspects of the Moon prints are on view in the final gallery of the exhibition. To quote the exhibit curators:

Images of the moon in its many phases provide a common backdrop for the characters in this series. Stoic warriors, samurai, everyday townspeople, demons, poets, and courtesans—drawn from Japanese and Chinese history and folklore, literature, and theater—reference stories relating to the moon... In these mature works, Yoshitoshi achieved his distinctive aesthetic by combining flat design with a strategic approach to realistic perspective that conveys suspended moments of action.



Tsukioka Yoshitoshi, Ariko no Naishi Weeping,
 from the series One Hundred Aspects of the Moon, 1886

Yoshitoshi died shortly after completing the One Hundred Aspects of the Moon series. Although he did have student workers in his studio at the end of his career, no artist in Japan could match his vision or expertise. The great age of Japan's woodblock prints was over.

Yoshitoshi may not have been able to pass on the torch of this amazing Japanese art form but he did succeed in a much more important respect: contributing to the preservation of the living spirit of Japan! 

The British Museum is currently presenting an exhibition on Manga, which traces its roots to the woodblock printing of Japan's past, to Yoshitoshi in particular. I plan to do a review of the Manga exhibit catalog, published by Thames and Hudson, in which I will further comment on the achievements and influence of Tsukioka Yoshitoshi.

***
Text: Copyright of Ed Voves, all rights reserved                                                                                           
Images courtesy of the  Philadelphia Museum of Art. Original photos © Anne Lloyd

Introductory Image:
Anne Lloyd, Photo (2019) Detail of Tsukioka Yoshitoshi's The Heian Poet Yasumasa Playing the Flute by Moonlight, Subduing the Bandit Yasusuke with His Music,1883. Full record below.

Anne Lloyd, Photos (2019) Picture of Kanagi Toshikage's Memorial Portrait of Taiso (Tsukioka) Yoshitoshi, 1892. Color woodcut. Blocks carved by Horikō Enkatsu.      Published by Akiyama Buemon, 9 banchi 3 chōme Muromachi Nihonbashi‑ku,Tokyo. Sheet (ōban tate‑e): approximately 15 1/2 × 10 1/2 inches (39.4 × 26.7 cm)  Purchased with funds contributed by the E. Rhodes and Leona B. Carpenter Foundation, 1989 1989‑47‑641

Tsukioka Yoshitoshi (Japanese,1839-1892) General Masakiyo at Shinshū Castle during the Invasion of Korea in 1590 Color woodcut on three panels (triptych). Overall:15 1/2 × 31 1/2 inches.  Philadelphia Museum of Art. Gift of Sidney A. Tannenbaum, 1978. #1978-129-16 a-c.

Anne Lloyd, Photo (2019) Tsukioka Yoshitoshi's The Twelfth‑Century Shogun Minamoto Yoritomo Releasing a Thousand Cranes at the Beach at Yuigahama. From the series Famous Sights along the Tōkaidō ,1863. Color woodcut. Blocks carved by Katata Hori Chō.  Published by Shōbundō. Sheet (ōban tate‑e): approximately 15 1/2 × 10 1/2 inches (39.4 × 26.7 cm). Philadelphia Museum of Art. Gift of Sidney A. Tannenbaum, 1978.

Anne Lloyd, Photos (2019) Picture of Tsukioka Yoshitoshi's Aizu Kōmon Kagekatsu, Examining a Head (From the series, Selection of One Hundred Warriors), 1868.
Color woodcut. Published by Ohashi. Sheet (ōban tate‑e): approximately 15 1/2 × 10 1/2 inches (39.4 × 26.7 cm). Philadelphia Museum of Art. Gift of Sidney A. Tannenbaum, 1978.

Tsukioka Yoshitoshi (Japanese,1839-1892) I Want to Cancel My Subscription; Woman Reading Newspaper, from the series A Collection of Desires, 1878. Color woodcut. Published by Inoue Mohei Sheet (ōban tate‑e): approximately 15 1/2 × 10 1/2 inches (39.4 × 26.7 cm). Purchased with funds contributed by the E. Rhodes and Leona B. Carpenter Foundation, 1989. Philadelphia Museum of Art, 1989‑47‑42


Anne Lloyd, Photo (2019) Detail of Tsukioka Yoshitoshi's Famous Soldiers of Japan (Heroes of the Satsuma Rebellion),1878. Color woodcut triptych. Blocks carved by Hori Yata.        Published by Fukuda Kumajirō, 19 banchi Hasegawa‑chō, Nihonbashi‑ku, Tokyo.            Sheet (ōban tate‑e triptych): approximately 15 1/2 × 31 1/2 inches (39.4 × 80 cm) Philadelphia Museum of Art. Purchased with funds contributed by the E. Rhodes and Leona B. Carpenter Foundation, 1989. # 1989‑47‑66a—c

Tsukioka Yoshitoshi (Japanese,1839-1892) The Heian Poet Yasumasa Playing the Flute by Moonlight, Subduing the Bandit Yasusuke with His Music, 1883. Color woodcut on three panels (triptych). Ōban triptych: 14 1/16 x 28 7/8 inches.  Purchased with funds contributed by the E. Rhodes and Leona B. Carpenter Foundation, 1989. Image courtesy of Philadelphia Museum of Art, 2019.

Anne Lloyd, Photo (2019) Photo of the short film on view at the Yoshitoshi, Spirit and Spectacle exhibition, showing the techniques used in Japanese woodblock printing.

Anne Lloyd, Photo (2019) Gallery view of the Yoshitoshi, Spirit and Spectacle exhibition at the Philadelphia Museum of Art. Photo shows a display of the stages of printing a woodblock print according to the technique used by Yoshitoshi.

Anne Lloyd, Photos (2019) Picture and detail of Yoshitoshi's Winter: Maboroshidayū with Snow Rabbit at Daishorō, the Flower Mansion in Nezu. From the series The Four Seasons at their Height (Zensei shiki), 1883. Color woodcut on three panels (triptych).  Blocks carved by Horikō Yamamoto tō and published by Akiyama Buemon, 9 banchi 3 chōme Muromachi Nihonbashi‑ku, Tokyo. Sheet (ōban tate‑e triptych): approximately 15 1/2 × 31 1/2 inches (39.4 × 80 cm). Philadelphia Museum of Art. Purchased with funds contributed by the E. Rhodes and Leona B. Carpenter Foundation, 1989. # 1989‑47‑338a—c

Anne Lloyd, Photo (2019) Gallery view of the Yoshitoshi, Spirit and Spectacle exhibition at the Philadelphia Museum of Art. Photo shows the display of the One Hundred Aspects of the Moon woodblock print series.

Tsukioka Yoshitoshi (Japanese,1839-1892) Ariko no Naishi Weeping, from the series One Hundred Aspects of the Moon, 1886. Color woodcut. Sheet (ōban tate-e): approximately 15 1/2 × 10 1/2 inches. Purchased with funds contributed by the E. Rhodes and Leona B. Carpenter Foundation, 1989. Image courtesy of Philadelphia Museum of Art, 2019

Wednesday, February 18, 2015

From Ancient to Modern: Archaeology and Aesthetics at ISAW



From Ancient to Modern: Archaeology and Aesthetics Institute for the Study of the Ancient World


February 12, 2015 to June 7, 2015

Reviewed by Ed Voves

When visiting art exhibitions, one should always expect the unexpected. Unfamiliar masterpieces and unconventional exhibit presentations can transform our vision of humanity. 

Exhibitions ought to challenge our long-term assumptions about art, make us comprehend the inner dynamics of works of art, as well as their surface attributes. In fact there should be a little box at the end of each exhibit where we can dispose of our preconceptions like the ID tags that we discard when leaving museums.

The Institute for the Study of the Ancient World (ISAW) in New York City does not provide a little box for ID tags, as its exhibits are free. Preconceptions don’t last very long in its galleries. Old, threadbare ideas are the only form of ancient history you will not find here.

From Ancient to Modern: Archaeology and Aesthetics is the latest exhibition at the ISAW. Fifty art works from ancient Mesopotamia are integrated with vintage photos and documents from two major archaeological expeditions during the 1920's and 1930's. These artifacts are expertly displayed in a way that recalls the 2011 ISAW exhibit Edge of Empires, which detailed the excavation of the Roman city in Syria, Dura-Europos, during the inter-war years.




Standing Male Worshiper, ca. 2900–2600 B.C.

The major innovation of From Ancient to Modern: Archaeology and Aesthetics is the inclusion of several masterpieces of modern art.  This is a first for ISAW and not as surprising as it might initially seem. These works, created by Henry Moore, Alberto Giacometti and Willem de Kooning were all influenced by the objects unearthed at the celebrated "digs" in Iraq during the period between the two world wars. 




Henry Moore, Half Figure II, 1929

The curators of From Ancient to Modern took the even bolder step of widening the scope of the exhibit to include art by contemporary artists. These works by Jananne al-Ani and Michael Rakowitz underscore the human tragedy of recent wars in Iraq and the tragic looting of the National Museum of Iraq in 2003.

With this deeply moving exhibition, Jennifer Chi, ISAW’s Director of Exhibitions, and Professor Pedro Azara, of the Polytechnic University of Catalonia, have powerfully asserted a visionary role for art in articulating the values of human society.

All this in two moderately-sized galleries at 15 E. 84th Street in NYC!

History begins at Sumer in Mesopotamia, as the famous book by Samuel Noah Kramer declared. But archaeological ventures to Mesopotamia got a late start, at least in comparison with expeditions to Egypt. The reasons for this are complex. But the discovery of the treasure-filled tomb of Tutankhamun in November 1922, which sparked world-wide Egyptomania, spurred two major efforts to uncover the buried past of Mesopotamia.




Leonard Woolley Waxing a Skeleton for Removal, Ur, ca. 1929-1930


The first of these was a joint British Museum/University of Pennsylvania partnership which focused on the site of Ur in southern Iraq. Ur of the Chaldees was the birthplace of the Biblical patriarch, Abraham. The great British archaeologist, Leonard Woolley, led a series of "campaigns" to Ur starting in 1922 and lasting until 1934. 

The second mission to Mesopotamia was the Iraq Expedition of the Oriental Institute of the University of Chicago. From 1930 to 1937, a distinguished Dutch archaeologist, Henri Frankfort, brought a well-organized team of scholars to the Diyala River valley. A tributary flowing from the north into the Tigris River, the Diyala River had previously been thought to be too far from the main centers of early Sumerian civilization along the Euphrates River to yield much of interest. The methodical Frankfort disproved such speculations with history-changing finds on a very big scale.

The military terminology of archaeology this period is not coincidental. As the superb companion volume to the ISAW exhibit makes clear, Woolley's excavations had the direct support of the British Army and Colonial Office which dominated Iraq in the years following World War I. Frankfort's "campaigns" in the more remote Diyala region benefited too from the prestige and power of Western colonialism.

The ISAW exhibit is subtitled Archaeology and Aesthetics. As well as being an accomplished archeologist with recent fieldwork (done under dangerous circumstances) in Iraq, Professor Azara is a noted authority on aesthetics. The way that human beings perceive art and then conceptualize it in terms of personal experience or societal influences is of vast significance.

Such aesthetic concerns are often ignored or treated as rarefied, elitist ideals. The ISAW exhibit proves that prejudice towards deep thinking about art is totally wide of the mark. Aesthetics, as the companion volume notes, is a vital mode of critical thinking. Aesthetics enables us to judge and to transform objects and images "with meaning, into windows to the world or to ourselves."

Aesthetics, from time to time, need a little help from the Publicity Department. The discoveries at Ur were a notable example of this interaction.

The ISAW exhibit deals with the savvy manipulation of the media culture of the 1920's and 1930's by Leonard Woolley and his fashion-conscious wife, Katherine. Woolley's PR efforts were rewarded by the discovery in 1927 of the glittering diadem of Queen Puabi and a mass of other jewels and golden accoutrements, dating from 2500 to 2300 BC, at Ur. It was an archaeological coup to rival the treasure of Tutankhamun. 




Puabi's headdress and cloak, ca. 2500–2300 B.C.

Woolley left no publicity venue untapped. From color photography supplements in the Sunday newspapers of the era to travelling exhibits of the Ur treasures, Woolley kept the Mesopotamian discoveries before the public eye. I was particularly struck by the catalog of a special display, Exhibits from the Royal Tombs of Ur of the Chaldees, held in 1934 at the Strawbridge and Clothier department store in Philadelphia! 




Female Worshipper, ca. 2700-2500 B.C.

The enjoyable and fascinating array of ancient art works and publicity documents related to Ur in the ISAW exhibit naturally command our interest. But Henri Frankfort's discoveries at the Diyala River excavations were hugely significant as well. These statues or votive images were initially characterized in some quarters as "idols." Many questions were raised whether these unsettling objects were art works at all. 

I am planning a separate post on Art Eyewitness to review the companion volume to From Ancient to Modern and will discuss this theme in more detail. For now, it is enough to note that Henry Moore and Willem de Kooning were moved by these ancient sculptures to create new art works of their own.



Cover of catalogue, Ancient to Modern: Archaeology and Aesthetics

It is in the second of the ISAW galleries that I wish to linger for there the contemporary works by Michael Rakowitz and Jananne al-Ani are presented. Rakowitz's family is of Iraqi-Jewish heritage and al-Ani was born in Kirkuk, Iraq. Both of these artists now live and work in the West, but the history of Iraq, ancient and modern, is woven into their work with the thread of memory.

Rakowitz recreated objects looted from the National Museum of Iraq in Baghdad in 2003. Troops from the U.S. and coalition forces were posted nearby but failed or were not ordered to intervene to stop the vandalism. Rakowitz used cheap disposable materials from recycled milk cartoons and cigarette packs to recreate these lost art works in order to emphasize how a nation’s culture can be treated as "disposable."

Given the recent adulation for the "Monuments Men," who saved thousands of art works from the Nazis, the looting of the National Museum of Iraq is inexplicable. The failure of Allied troops to protect the cultural heritage of Iraq raises troubling questions about the level of Western commitment to the people of Iraq and other Middle Eastern nations. The team that Woolley led to Ur during the 1920's brought some of the most precious art works of Mesopotamia to the collections of the British Museum and to the University of Pennsylvania Museum. But the ancient art that was excavated and placed in the National Museum of Iraq in Baghdad was shrugged-off in 2003.

Whatever the reason for this appalling blunder, Rakowitz's installation does not let the Western powers off the hook of collective responsibility.  Jananne al-Ani, with her photographic and multi-media work, likewise presents challenging, critical images relating to Iraq’s agony. 




Jananne al-Ani, Untitled, May 1991 [Gulf War Work]


Untitled May 1991 [Gulf War Work] is on display at the ISAW. It is a deceptively simple piece, with a grid of twenty images arranged on a wall in the manner of a family photo gallery. One of the rows indeed shows photos of al-Ani's family. The top row shows images of treasures from the National Museum of Iraq and a depiction of Queen Puabi wearing her fabled golden diadem. There is a row of portraits of Iraqi women with haunted or grief-stricken eyes. Any of these women could be a latter-day Puabi, fit to wear her golden diadem.

These photographs are followed in the bottom row by images of war.

Jananne al-Ani's Untitled May 1991 is the kind of art work that I referred to at the beginning of this review. It is the unexpected work that forces you to question your preconceptions. It struck me with particular force.

During the Gulf War years, I worked as a news research librarian for the Philadelphia Inquirer and the Philadelphia Daily News. One of my tasks was to retrieve and index the stream of Associated Press photos as they were digitally transmitted. Particularly during the 2003 Gulf War "campaign," marked as it was by the prolonged bombardment of Baghdad, I was sickened by many of the incoming images. The AP pictures of dead and mangled civilians, particularly children, were horrific. Very few of these were selected to appear in Western newspapers.


Jananne al-Ani's Untitled May 1991 brought the memories of these terrifying pictures flooding back to me. The “disposable” sculptures of Michael Rakowitz reinforced the effect.  I was not prepared for art work like this at the ISAW exhibit. I'm still looking for a box big enough to discard my preconceptions.


***
Text: Copyright of Ed Voves, all rights reserved 

Images Courtesy of the Institute for the Study of the Ancient World, New York City.

Introductory Image

Detail of Puabi’s headdress, apple clusters with large bales, ca. 2500–2300 B.C., Ur, Gold, Lapis Lazuli, Bitumen, L. 88 cm,  Joint Expedition of the British Museum and of the Museum of the University of  Pennsylvania, 8th season, 1929-1930. University of Pennsylvania Museum of Archeology and Anthropology (B16684.1) © Bruce White

Standing Male Worshiper, ca. 2900–2600 B.C., Early Dynastic I-II period of Mesopotamia, Eshnunna (modern Tell Asmar). Gypsum alabaster, shell, black limestone, bitumen, 11 5/8 x 5 1/8 x 3 7/8 in. (29.5 x 12.9 x 10 cm)  The Metropolitan Museum of Art, Fletcher Fund, 1940(40.156)  Image: © The Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York 

Henry Moore, Half Figure II. Cast concrete, H. 39.4 cm, W. 23 cm; D. 17 cm, 1929. The Robert and Lisa Sainsbury Collection, SCVA: UEA 79 © Robert and Lisa Sainsbury Collection, Sainsbury Centre for Visual Arts, University of East Anglia, UK

Leonard Woolley Waxing a Skeleton for Removal, Ur,  Photograph,  ca. 1929-1930 Courtesy of the University of Pennsylvania Museum of Archaeology and Anthropology (191485) © Courtesy of Penn Museum

Puabi's headdress and cloak, ca. 2500–2300 B.C., Ur, Tomb PG 800, Gold, Lapis Lazuli, Carnelian and various stones,  (Hair Ring), B17709 (Wreath), B16693 (Decorative Comb), B17710 (Wreath), B17711 (Wreath), B17711A (Hair Ribbon), B17712A, B (Earrings), 98-9-9A, B (Hair Rings), B17708 (Frontlet), B16694 (Necklace), 83-7-1.1–83-7-1.89 (Cloak). Joint Expedition of the British Museum and of the Museum of the University of  Pennsylvania, 6th season, 1927-1928.University of Pennsylvania Museum of Archeology and Anthropology © Bruce White

Female Worshipper, ca. 2700-2500 B.C., Tell Asmar, Khafajah,(Sin Temple IX) Iraq, Gypsum, shell, H, 36.1 cm, W, 13.5 cm,D. 7.1 cm, Oriental Institute Museum, Chicago, 1930-1937  (A12412)  Image © Oriental Institute Museum, Chicago

Cover of the exhibit catalogue, Ancient to Modern: Archaeology and Aesthetics, published by Princeton University Press. Cover illustration by Michael Rakowitz from his installation   The Invisible Enemy Should Not Exist” (Recovered, Missing, Stolen) (2003) 

Jananne al-Ani, Untitled, May 1991 [Gulf War Work]. Silver gelatin prints on paper, 20 units: H. 20 cm; W. 20 cm (each), 1991. Courtesy of the artist. IWM: ART 16417 © Courtesy of Jananne al-Ani Estate and the Imperial War Museums