Two Artists United by Devotion to Women

New York Times - December 23, 2008

By RANDY KENNEDY

As artists' biographies go, those of Wallace Berman and Richard Prince could 
hardly be 
more different. Berman, who died at 50 in 1976, the victim of a drunken driver, 
was a 
kind of Beat guru flying just below the radar, showing his work in only one 
conventional 
gallery exhibition during his lifetime and popping into rare view in strange 
places: a 
cameo in "Easy Rider"; the cover of "Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band," 
where his face 
is wedged next to Tony Curtis's, just below Jung's.

By contrast Mr. Prince, 59, labored in obscurity for years but not exactly by 
choice: he 
wanted a larger audience and found it. For more than two decades he has been 
one of the 
most influential contemporary artists, and his work — paintings, photography, 
car-centric 
sculpture — has sold for many millions of dollars, allowing him to create an 
impressive 
studio complex in Rensselaerville, N.Y., in Albany County.

But Berman's eccentric, highly personal art and career has long fascinated Mr. 
Prince, who 
has painstakingly collected copies of his signature work, Semina, a kind of 
early California 
zine that Berman made with — and mailed only to — his friends, from 1955 to 
1963. For 
Mr. Prince, a bibliophile with a special love for the Beat years, the 
fascination stems partly 
from Berman's Zelig-like connections in those years: his circle included Allen 
Ginsberg, 
Dennis Hopper and Henry Miller. One of Berman's collaborators was the artist 
known as 
Cameron, whose first husband, Jack Parsons, as Mr. Prince notes, was a friend 
of L. Ron 
Hubbard, the founder of Scientology.

But these days Mr. Prince seems to be drawn to Berman as much for what his life 
represented, an almost ascetic pursuit of art for art's sake that seems 
increasingly distant 
from today's art world. Berman's work "was very word-oriented and a lot of it 
was free," 
Mr. Prince said in a recent telephone interview. "It had nothing to do with the 
market, and 
it had to do with a lifestyle that was very anti-establishment."

For the first time Mr. Prince's work will appear alongside Berman's in a show 
called "She" 
opening Jan. 15 and running through March 8 at the Michael Kohn Gallery in Los 
Angeles. 
The exhibition focuses on a common subject where the two artists overlap in odd 
and 
unexpected ways: women.

Berman surrounded himself with women and loved photographing them, seemingly 
just 
for the pleasure of taking the shot; most of his pictures were never even 
printed during his 
lifetime. He made romantic portraits of his wife, Shirley, and erotic ones of 
the painter Jay 
DeFeo and unlikely ones of the young actress Teri Garr, a friend to whom he 
regularly 
mailed artwork. "He was a great person," Ms. Garr recalled. "He was always 
saying, `Just 
make things, just make things.' "

His collages often relied on found imagery of women in magazines. And it was a 
borrowed 
image of a woman — a sinuous drawing of a demonlike one and a man in flagrante 
delicto 
— that led to Berman's arrest and conviction in 1957 on obscenity charges 
during his first 
commercial show at the Ferus Gallery in Los Angeles, establishing the twin 
themes of his 
career: exploring the fringes of American society and shunning the attention of 
the 
mainstream.

Like Berman, Mr. Prince mines the ways that society has portrayed women and how 
women have seemed to want to be portrayed. But his obsessions — images of half-
clothed women taken from pulp fiction, biker magazines and other subculture 
publications — toy much more ambiguously and provocatively with sexism, 
exploitation 
and the conventions of pornography than did Berman's. And Mr. Prince constantly 
pushes 
buttons to keep those ambiguities alive. In a question-and-answer session 
included in the 
show's catalog, he is asked whether he has any female friends. He says no. 
Asked when he 
thinks a girl becomes a woman, he says it is when she starts baby-sitting.

"I think he likes to be mischievous," said Kristine McKenna, a writer and 
curator who 
organized the exhibition with Mr. Prince and Berman's widow. "When Richard 
makes this 
kind of work, you get the impression that it's very playful, that he goes into 
it to figure out 
what it's going to be." (Ms. McKenna recalled that when she first met Mr. 
Prince in the 
1980s, while he was living in the Venice section of Los Angeles, his spare, 
suburban-style 
house was "strewn with copies of all these weird specialty magazines like 
Parakeet 
Fancier.")

She said the idea for the show came about because she knew of Mr. Prince's 
longstanding 
interest in Berman and thought that their mutual focus on women and sensuality 
would be 
an interesting way to put their work together. After many years of newfound 
interest in 
Berman's art, this also seems to be his moment. His work is included in an 
exhibition now 
on view at the Moderna Museet in Stockholm and in shows that closed recently at 
the 
Pompidou Center in Paris and the Camden Arts Center in London. Galerie Frank 
Elbaz, a 
contemporary space in Paris, is planning a show, and "Semina Culture," a 
traveling 
exhibition organized in part by Ms. McKenna from 2005 to 2007, was well 
received.

Mr. Prince said he agonized over the work he wanted to include in the Los 
Angeles 
exhibition, submitting and then withdrawing hundreds of pieces before settling 
mostly on 
recent collages that take a familiar theme of his — covers of naughty nurse 
novels — and 
combine it with pornographic images, tame compared with most things floating 
around 
the Internet but most still too explicit for a family newspaper.

While his work and Berman's are very different, Mr. Prince said, he sees an 
affinity in the 
frankness of their approach to carnality, a subject that art too often dances 
around. "I've 
never wanted to be transgressive or to make an image that was unacceptable or 
that I 
would have to censor," he said. "But that being said, I think a lot of the 
imagery I do create 
is sexual, and I hope it does turn people on."

If it is pornography, he said of his and Berman's work, he hopes it is a better 
kind. 
"Ultimately I find porn boring," he said. "An erotic painting by Picasso is 
infinitely more 
interesting to me. Pornography is only functional. What I'm looking for is a 
picture that 
dreams and imagines."



http://www.nytimes.com/2008/12/23/arts/design/23prin.html?_r=1





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