拍品专文
Souvenir was painted in 1962, halfway through Gerald Laing’s four years of study at St Martin’s School of Art in London, and can be counted among the first of his Pop paintings at an early moment in the movement’s history. He created such works independently of the equally young Pop artists who were graduating in that year from the Royal College of Art – including Peter Phillips, with whom he was to collaborate on a sculptural project in 1966, Derek Boshier and David Hockney – and with only fragmentary knowledge of the early Pop works being created in New York by Andy Warhol, Roy Lichtenstein, James Rosenquist, Tom Wesselmann and Robert Indiana (for whom he was to work briefly as an assistant in the summer of 1963).
Though Laing’s Pop phase was to prove short-lived, ending in 1966 with his move into minimalist sculpture and later into more traditional sculptural portraits cast in bronze, his voice was a distinctive one in terms both of his subject matter and his technical procedures. Images rooted in gender identity predominated during that period, in his celebrations of the female beauty of bikini-clad starlets and celebrated movie stars and in the masculine bravado of his racing-car drivers, astronauts and sky divers. His art, however, unusually also had a dark side as a counterpoint to this concern with glamour and youthful exuberance. This was manifested particularly in the excursions into political territory that made him part of a select band of British Pop artists who looked critically at their society at a time of crisis and Cold War tensions: Boshier, Richard Hamilton, R.B. Kitaj (a reluctant influence on his younger Pop colleagues), Colin Self and Joe Tilson are the most notable of those in that rarefied company.
The Cuban Missile Crisis of October 1962, which brought the U.S.A. to the brink of nuclear war with the Soviet Union, prompted the making of Souvenir, caustically titled in commemoration of a terrifying 13 days of diplomatic brinkmanship on both sides. This relief was painted on wooden slats placed vertically across the surface, so that the image changes, both literally and metaphorically, according to the viewer’s point of view. Seen from the right, one is presented with a portrait of President Kennedy against the stars and stripes of the American flag; his mouth open, he appears to be in full flow, shouting, defending his country’s safety against the threat of aggression represented by the Russians’ siting of nuclear missiles on Cuban soil. As one passes across the painting and looks back, it is Premier Khrushchev who comes into view against the Hammer and Sickle; he, too, appears belligerent and out of control. Seen separately, each image has the clarity and simplification of poster art. It is only when one stands directly in front of the painting that these two independent motifs merge into one, creating a much more dynamic fused image that seems to shake and rattle as if about to explode. The world’s most powerful two leaders of the time merge into what Laing himself later described as ‘a two-mouthed monster’. It would perhaps be more apt to describe this grotesque hybrid figure as ‘two-faced’, each hypocritically dragging his countrymen into the most extreme and dangerous confrontation in the name of safety and the protection of their opposed political and economic systems.
Laing’s picture, painted when he was just 26, is remarkable in its confidence. Though articulated in the punchy style of political propaganda, it is disturbing precisely because it does not present the situation as a confrontation of good against evil, but as a complex and ambiguous interaction between unyielding and diametrically opposed positions. Though small in its dimensions, Souvenir is as bold visually as it is its political implications, embodying with great economy the threatening atmosphere engulfing the world at the height of the Cold War.
Laing painted other politically motivated pictures during his early Pop period, notably Lincoln Convertible 1964, on which he began work immediately after Kennedy’s assassination on 22 November 1963. Revealingly, on returning four decades later to the language of his classic Pop paintings, in works such as Only one of them uses Colgate 2004 and American Gothic of the same year, it was again in a spirit of political protest, this time against the human rights abuses by American military police personnel against Iraqi prisoners at Abu Ghraib. True to form, he reacted spontaneously and with righteous indignation to events portrayed in the news, using his art, as he had in Souvenir, as a weapon of political engagement.
We are very grateful to Marco Livingstone for preparing this catalogue entry.
Though Laing’s Pop phase was to prove short-lived, ending in 1966 with his move into minimalist sculpture and later into more traditional sculptural portraits cast in bronze, his voice was a distinctive one in terms both of his subject matter and his technical procedures. Images rooted in gender identity predominated during that period, in his celebrations of the female beauty of bikini-clad starlets and celebrated movie stars and in the masculine bravado of his racing-car drivers, astronauts and sky divers. His art, however, unusually also had a dark side as a counterpoint to this concern with glamour and youthful exuberance. This was manifested particularly in the excursions into political territory that made him part of a select band of British Pop artists who looked critically at their society at a time of crisis and Cold War tensions: Boshier, Richard Hamilton, R.B. Kitaj (a reluctant influence on his younger Pop colleagues), Colin Self and Joe Tilson are the most notable of those in that rarefied company.
The Cuban Missile Crisis of October 1962, which brought the U.S.A. to the brink of nuclear war with the Soviet Union, prompted the making of Souvenir, caustically titled in commemoration of a terrifying 13 days of diplomatic brinkmanship on both sides. This relief was painted on wooden slats placed vertically across the surface, so that the image changes, both literally and metaphorically, according to the viewer’s point of view. Seen from the right, one is presented with a portrait of President Kennedy against the stars and stripes of the American flag; his mouth open, he appears to be in full flow, shouting, defending his country’s safety against the threat of aggression represented by the Russians’ siting of nuclear missiles on Cuban soil. As one passes across the painting and looks back, it is Premier Khrushchev who comes into view against the Hammer and Sickle; he, too, appears belligerent and out of control. Seen separately, each image has the clarity and simplification of poster art. It is only when one stands directly in front of the painting that these two independent motifs merge into one, creating a much more dynamic fused image that seems to shake and rattle as if about to explode. The world’s most powerful two leaders of the time merge into what Laing himself later described as ‘a two-mouthed monster’. It would perhaps be more apt to describe this grotesque hybrid figure as ‘two-faced’, each hypocritically dragging his countrymen into the most extreme and dangerous confrontation in the name of safety and the protection of their opposed political and economic systems.
Laing’s picture, painted when he was just 26, is remarkable in its confidence. Though articulated in the punchy style of political propaganda, it is disturbing precisely because it does not present the situation as a confrontation of good against evil, but as a complex and ambiguous interaction between unyielding and diametrically opposed positions. Though small in its dimensions, Souvenir is as bold visually as it is its political implications, embodying with great economy the threatening atmosphere engulfing the world at the height of the Cold War.
Laing painted other politically motivated pictures during his early Pop period, notably Lincoln Convertible 1964, on which he began work immediately after Kennedy’s assassination on 22 November 1963. Revealingly, on returning four decades later to the language of his classic Pop paintings, in works such as Only one of them uses Colgate 2004 and American Gothic of the same year, it was again in a spirit of political protest, this time against the human rights abuses by American military police personnel against Iraqi prisoners at Abu Ghraib. True to form, he reacted spontaneously and with righteous indignation to events portrayed in the news, using his art, as he had in Souvenir, as a weapon of political engagement.
We are very grateful to Marco Livingstone for preparing this catalogue entry.