拍品专文
Human Dignity is a groundbreaking painting in which Peter Saul challenges America to consider its ever increasing role in global politics. Painted in 1966, in the middle of the Vietnam War, Saul uses his signature style to test the limits of what painting is capable of. Going further than Warhol ever dared, by combining hyperchromatic Day-Glo colors, caricatures of American culture, and motifs taken directly from Vietnam, Saul looks to force his audience to directly confront their own feelings as to the legitimacy of the war. Described by the New York Times critic Roberta Smith as “an early masterpiece” (R. Smith, “Review: ‘Peter Saul: From Pop to Punk,’ a Firebrand Willing to Offend,” New York Times, March 12, 2015), Human Dignity sits alongside other examples from this important body of work, many of which are now in public museum collections including Saigon (1967, Whitney Museum of American Art, New York), White Nurse (1965, the Art Institute of Chicago), and Little Joe in Hanoi (1968, Musée des Beaux-Arts de Dole).
Exhibited at the 1967 Pittsburgh International, and subsequently at several of the artist’s important retrospectives including most recently at New York’s New Museum in 2020, Human Dignity emerged from Saul’s formative years in the San Francisco Bay Area. It presents a phantasmagoria composed of bold psychedelic colors. Floating above the palm trees are three figures, including one—emblazoned with the work’s title across their chest—that evokes a Superman like superhero, a striking symbol of American cultural hegemony. Additionally, as noted by Smith, an American G.I. mounted on a soft, white polka-dot cross “a little like Wonder Bread packaging” (Ibid.). This Pop sensibility—putting American cultural and commercial power under the microscope—expands on the detached coolness of Andy Warhol and Roy Lichtenstein by incorporating a much more biting form of social critique. Human Dignity wears its heart on its sleeve, unafraid to be loud, bold, and decisive. An outsider for much of his career, Saul is able to look at American culture and politics with a fresh, incisive gaze.
In Human Dignity, Saul adopts evokes the radical nature of some of his artistic heroes, including Paul Cadmus and Mike Kelley. Kelley’s work in particular has strong parallels with present work, in that it adopts a level of idiosyncratic language to jolt the viewer into considered introspection. The influence of the Bay Area can also be seen in the cartoonish figures that evoke the psychodelia of the 1960s. Yet within this naiveite lies difficult and pressing topics. Text plays a large part in the work; the painting’s title is emblazed on the central figure, for example. In addition, to reinforce this Saul stamps the green soldier’s helmet with the moniker “White Garbage.” The rest of the soldier’s uniform bursts open to reveal a dripping red chest that recalls the strange bodies of Paul Gauguin’s sinewy The Yellow Christ (1889). Saul cleverly melds together these formal histories with his own fundamental commentary.
The artist described the essence of Human Dignity on the occasion of his retrospective at the New Museum, “I wanted [my] political art…not to be in the middle. My feeling about politics in art is that it’s usually feeble, because it delivers the expected message. The expected message is dead on arrival, because all it does is point out that the good guys are good, the bad guys are bad. I wanted work that was far, far more troubling. If a picture isn’t troubling, why even think about it?” (P. Saul, “Audio Guide: Human Dignity,” New York, New Museum of Contemporary Art, 2020-2021, https://www.newmuseum.org/exhibitions/view/peter-saul-crime-and-punishment). In Human Dignity, Saul achieves this in full, the hypocrisy and grotesque horrors of war are on full display. As the artist himself notes, “To be not shocking means to be furniture” (P. Saul, quoted by M. Isreal, “Disasters of War,” in M. Gioni & G. Carrion-Murayari, Peter Saul: Crime and Punishment, exh. cat. New Museum, New York, 2020, p. 35).
As critic Donald Kuspit writes of Saul’s paintings, “It is their expressive bravado—their sheer physical opulence and sardonic intensity—that gives them extraordinary carrying power, and keeps them from becoming moralistic and farcically punitive, like so much politically oriented art” (D. Kuspit, “Peter Saul: Frumkin/Adams,” Artforum, February 1991, https://www.artforum.com/print/reviews/199102/peter-saul-59180). Unsurprisingly, Saul’s extraordinary career over six decades has been met with widespread acclaim as he turns 88 this year. His 1999 retrospective toured France, and his 2008 retrospective, curated by Dan Cameron, travelled from the Orange County Museum of Art, Newport Beach to the Pennsylvania Academy of Fine Arts, Philadelphia, and the Contemporary Arts Center New Orleans. In 2010, Saul was elected to the American Academy of Arts and Letters.
“If a picture isn’t troubling, why even think about it?” - Peter Saul
Human Dignity predicts Saul’s influential career and sets the stage for many decades of pressing and rigorous painterly interventions into art history and culture at large. He has pioneered a style completely his own within the Pop art vernacular by remaining as dedicated to the properties of paint as he is to the politics he represents. Human Dignity reminds us that the role of art has always been to elevate humanity and provide outlets for humanistic discussion. Saul’s oeuvre has always accomplished this mandate, especially in the face of controversial global events. The surreal, shocking colors and forms of Human Dignity ensure that we know it is a Peter Saul, and yet its subjects are universal and timeless; indeed, Human Dignity is a history painting for modern times.
Exhibited at the 1967 Pittsburgh International, and subsequently at several of the artist’s important retrospectives including most recently at New York’s New Museum in 2020, Human Dignity emerged from Saul’s formative years in the San Francisco Bay Area. It presents a phantasmagoria composed of bold psychedelic colors. Floating above the palm trees are three figures, including one—emblazoned with the work’s title across their chest—that evokes a Superman like superhero, a striking symbol of American cultural hegemony. Additionally, as noted by Smith, an American G.I. mounted on a soft, white polka-dot cross “a little like Wonder Bread packaging” (Ibid.). This Pop sensibility—putting American cultural and commercial power under the microscope—expands on the detached coolness of Andy Warhol and Roy Lichtenstein by incorporating a much more biting form of social critique. Human Dignity wears its heart on its sleeve, unafraid to be loud, bold, and decisive. An outsider for much of his career, Saul is able to look at American culture and politics with a fresh, incisive gaze.
In Human Dignity, Saul adopts evokes the radical nature of some of his artistic heroes, including Paul Cadmus and Mike Kelley. Kelley’s work in particular has strong parallels with present work, in that it adopts a level of idiosyncratic language to jolt the viewer into considered introspection. The influence of the Bay Area can also be seen in the cartoonish figures that evoke the psychodelia of the 1960s. Yet within this naiveite lies difficult and pressing topics. Text plays a large part in the work; the painting’s title is emblazed on the central figure, for example. In addition, to reinforce this Saul stamps the green soldier’s helmet with the moniker “White Garbage.” The rest of the soldier’s uniform bursts open to reveal a dripping red chest that recalls the strange bodies of Paul Gauguin’s sinewy The Yellow Christ (1889). Saul cleverly melds together these formal histories with his own fundamental commentary.
The artist described the essence of Human Dignity on the occasion of his retrospective at the New Museum, “I wanted [my] political art…not to be in the middle. My feeling about politics in art is that it’s usually feeble, because it delivers the expected message. The expected message is dead on arrival, because all it does is point out that the good guys are good, the bad guys are bad. I wanted work that was far, far more troubling. If a picture isn’t troubling, why even think about it?” (P. Saul, “Audio Guide: Human Dignity,” New York, New Museum of Contemporary Art, 2020-2021, https://www.newmuseum.org/exhibitions/view/peter-saul-crime-and-punishment). In Human Dignity, Saul achieves this in full, the hypocrisy and grotesque horrors of war are on full display. As the artist himself notes, “To be not shocking means to be furniture” (P. Saul, quoted by M. Isreal, “Disasters of War,” in M. Gioni & G. Carrion-Murayari, Peter Saul: Crime and Punishment, exh. cat. New Museum, New York, 2020, p. 35).
As critic Donald Kuspit writes of Saul’s paintings, “It is their expressive bravado—their sheer physical opulence and sardonic intensity—that gives them extraordinary carrying power, and keeps them from becoming moralistic and farcically punitive, like so much politically oriented art” (D. Kuspit, “Peter Saul: Frumkin/Adams,” Artforum, February 1991, https://www.artforum.com/print/reviews/199102/peter-saul-59180). Unsurprisingly, Saul’s extraordinary career over six decades has been met with widespread acclaim as he turns 88 this year. His 1999 retrospective toured France, and his 2008 retrospective, curated by Dan Cameron, travelled from the Orange County Museum of Art, Newport Beach to the Pennsylvania Academy of Fine Arts, Philadelphia, and the Contemporary Arts Center New Orleans. In 2010, Saul was elected to the American Academy of Arts and Letters.
“If a picture isn’t troubling, why even think about it?” - Peter Saul
Human Dignity predicts Saul’s influential career and sets the stage for many decades of pressing and rigorous painterly interventions into art history and culture at large. He has pioneered a style completely his own within the Pop art vernacular by remaining as dedicated to the properties of paint as he is to the politics he represents. Human Dignity reminds us that the role of art has always been to elevate humanity and provide outlets for humanistic discussion. Saul’s oeuvre has always accomplished this mandate, especially in the face of controversial global events. The surreal, shocking colors and forms of Human Dignity ensure that we know it is a Peter Saul, and yet its subjects are universal and timeless; indeed, Human Dignity is a history painting for modern times.