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The view from the jaded top
Metropolitan Museum director offers an olive branch to New
York Mayor Giuliani
By Barry Grey
8 October 1999
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this version to print
An op-ed piece which appeared in the October 5 edition of the
New York Times sheds light on the belated and weak-kneed
response of the New York cultural establishment to the efforts
of Mayor Rudolph Giuliani to suppress an exhibit at the Brooklyn
Museum of Art.
Just days after Giuliani cut off municipal funding and filed
suit to evict the museum from its city-owned building, after the
museum refused to shut down the exhibit entitled Sensation:
Young British Artists from the Saatchi Collection, Philippe
de Montebello, director of the Metropolitan Museum of Art, weighed
into the controversy with a Times article bearing the headline
Making a Cause Out of Bad Art.
Montebello heads arguably the most powerful and prestigious
cultural institution in New York. Yet the target of his ire was
not Giuliani, who is engaged in a crude assault on artistic expression
and Constitutionally protected free speech, but rather those who
have reacted with anger and concern over the city's attack on
democratic rights.
They, according to Montebello, are missing the main point:
the Sensation exhibit is a collection of bad art,
and the museum and its most vocal defenders are guilty of perpetrating
a cultural hoax. The Metropolitan Museum director goes so far
as to praise Giuliani with the extraordinary assertion: Mayor
Rudolph Giuliani, for one, has shown astute critical acumen....
I find no fault with the Mayor's aesthetic sensibilities, only
with his effort at censorship.
To attribute Giuliani's demagogic attack on the Brooklyn Museum
to critical acumen and aesthetic sensibilities
is to insult the intelligence of the public. For one thing, as
Montebello well knows, the mayor has never bothered to look at
the exhibit. Instead he has seized on the controversial works
of which it is comprised for palpably and cynically political
purposes. Seeking the Republican nomination for the US Senate
race in 2000, he calculates that a well-publicized attack on sick
art and pornography will win over the Christian right
and other extreme elements in the party that have been cool to
his election bid because of his relatively moderate position on
abortion and other cultural issues.
Moreover, Giuliani has focused his assault on the issue of
religion. He has singled out a painting of the Virgin Mary by
Chris Ofili, a London-based artist of Nigerian descent, denouncing
it (or, more precisely, slandering it) as a blasphemous attack
on religion in general, and Catholicism in particular. As Giuliani
reiterated at a City Hall press conference on October 4, his criterion
for shutting down publicly-subsidized museums is whether or not
they display works that are anti-religious:
If another museum does the same thing that this museum
does, if it aggressively attacks, let's say, a different religion,
I'll have the same reaction to it.
Thus the fundamental issue is not the artistic merit of Ofili's
painting, or any of the other works in the Sensation
exhibit, but the democratic right to express viewsreligious
or anti-religiouswithout facing sanctions by the state.
Giuliani, and those who have lined up behind himthe Catholic
hierarchy in New York, Republican presidential aspirants, the
US House and Senateare seeking to establish a de facto proscription
on anti-religious expression, an assault on free speech that directly
contravenes the First Amendment separation of church and state.
Montebello simply ignores this crucial aspect of the controversy.
The chilling, McCarthyite essence of Giuliani's vendetta has deeply
troubled wide sections of the population in New York. Among the
record crowds that have lined up to view the Brooklyn Museum exhibit
are many thousands who consider their attendance an act of protest
against the city's assault on democratic rights.
It is obvious, in contrast, that Montebello, notwithstanding
his pro-forma objections to censorship, is not particularly bothered
by such questions. His indifference to basic issues of democratic
rights has, moreover, implications for his views on art. He finds
no fault with Giuliani's aesthetic sensibilities, only
with his effort at censorship (emphasis added).
This is a remarkable juxtaposition. Is does not seem to have
occurred to Montebello that there might be something profoundly
anti-aesthetic about a sensibility that embraces thought control
and state repression.
The bulk of Montebello's article is a rather commonplace rumination
on the difference between good and bad art. Whatever one may think
of his aesthetic notions, it is impossible to ignore the element
of fawning before Giuliani, who, after all, controls the city
purse strings.
Montebello concludes by reminding us that the Metropolitan,
along with nearly 30 of the city's cultural institutions, large
and small, did publicly ask the Mayor to reconsider his position
to cut the Brooklyn Museum's public financing and dismiss its
board. Even here, the obsequious and spineless tone is unmistakable.
Montebello chooses to omit the fact that it took the cultural
establishment more than a week to issue any public protest, and
that it did so only after secret negotiations between the chairman
of the Brooklyn Museum's board of directors, Robert S. Rubin,
and the city collapsed, despite Rubin's offer to remove the Ofili
painting and segregate other works which the mayor found offensive.
After reiterating that what remains terribly disturbing
to me is the failure of more people to join with Giuliani
in expressing their dislike for works that they find either
repulsive or unaesthetic or both, Montebello finishes with
a flourish: I firmly believe in the independent role of
museums and so much as I may disagree with some of the exhibitions
they mount, I will defend to the death their right to do soan
assertion that, based on all that has preceded it, needs to be
taken with a large grain of salt.
The artistic merit, or lack thereof, of the works featured
in the Brooklyn Museum exhibit is an important question. Aside
from the intrinsic value of the pieces, critical issues are raised,
such as the relationship between art and the general public, the
criteria for judging the merit of artistic creations, the overall
state of art in the present period. The World Socialist Web
Site will, in the coming days, publish a review of Sensation
by our arts editor, David Walsh.
We will not, however, lend the slightest support to those who
seek to obscure basic principles of free expression and democratic
rights under the cover of aesthetic criticism.
See Also:
Strong opposition in New York to Mayor
Giuliani's attack on art exhibit
[5 October 1999]
City Hall versus the Brooklyn Museum:
Artistic freedom and democratic rights
under attack in New York
[1 October 1999]
New York City's mayor threatens
Brooklyn Museum
[28 September 1999]
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