In recent years, artists have been interested in �slippage.� In painting, that often translates into an exploration of the space between abstraction and representation, or between two and three dimensions. �Unfinished,� the inaugural show at the Met Breuer, examines another important area � the gap between finished and unfinished.
[Image at top: Juan Gris (Spanish, Madrid 1887�1927 Boulogne-sur-Seine), Woman Reading, ca. 1927, oil and pencil on canvas. Gris said he liked the freedom and charm of unfinished work, but he didn’t consider this one finished–he simply stopped working on it when “his health began to fail.”]
The exhibition features a wide range of unfinished objects and riffs on the well-established idea that artists don�t always complete their projects. In the earliest pieces, the unfinished paintings, drawings, prints, and sculptures simply aren�t done. Large areas may still be sketched in with no paint on the canvas, while others are waiting for the details to be incorporated. The wall labels explain each scenario, and we learn that the artists� commission might have changed, the size may have been wrong, or other work took priority.
In the Modern era, artists placed less value on the refined surfaces of previous generations, working wet-on-wet rather than using traditional underpainting and glazing techniques. Back then, audiences tended to feel that the new approach, pioneered by painters like Van Gogh, Cezanne, and Picasso, looked unfinished. But the Modern works on display in this exhibition � for example, an abstract Mondrian sporting early pencil lines, a Van Gogh canvas revealing empty, unpainted areas � may have been considered incomplete even by the artists themselves.
�Non finito,� or intentionally unfinished, works are also thoughtfully considered. I’ve been drawn to this approach for a long time. In the mid-nineties, while in grad school, I glommed on to the fragmented drawings in Leonardo�s sketchbooks and began making paintings with fractured, isolated imagery. Later, Gilbert Stuart�s unfinished portrait of George Washington, painted in 1796 and on display at the National Portrait Gallery in Washington, reinforced my interest in gestures of the incomplete. I wondered what a painting that valued beginnings over resolution might look like. In 2010, I painted small fragments on large canvases rather than covering the entire swath of fabric. These ideas informed my thinking about Casualism, which is related though may not always include elements of incompleteness.
Somewhat paradoxically, leaving a painting unfinished isn’t as easy as it sounds. It involves determining the inherent value of beginnings and missteps when painting orthodoxy would cast them merely as transitory means to a better end. From this perspective, all the work in this show � whether or not the artist was making aesthetic, conceptual, or practical choices � resonates. Meaning and value reside in the story behind the process. Furthermore, on a formal level, the contrast between finished and unfinished is always visually striking. Finally, it is emotionally gratifying that so many orphaned artworks that reveal the vulnerability of their making, long considered unworthy, are finally getting some love.
Other critics (Ben Davis, Roberta Smith, Holland Cotter) have moaned that the show � comprising 197 objects, 40 percent of which have been culled from the Met�s collection � could have been more culturally diverse. That�s probably true here, as it usually is. Most likely the Met’s collection does include far more unfinished objects than those on display, over a broader cultural range. I think the curators have also missed an opportunity to put Provisional/Casualist painting in a broader historical context. Work by Richard Tuttle, Michael Krebber, Cordy Ryman, Mary Heilmann, Raoul De Keyser, or Gedy Siboni would certainly have been a better fit than the paintings by, say, Brice Marden, Luc Tuymans, and Andy Warhol. Rachel Harrison’s constructions would have looked good, too. But despite its narrow focus and absence of timely work by contemporary artists, the show speaks articulately both to the process of making art and to the question of irresolution that artists are wrestling with today. It certainly fulfills the Met Breuer’s mission of seeing contemporary art through the lens of art history. For this reason alone, the exhibition is a must-see. It may signify that the question �When do you know when a painting is done?� is finally yielding to a conversation about the process � not the product.
Follower of Giovanni Battista Cima da Conegliano (Italian, Conegliano ca. 1459�1517/18 Venice or Conegliano), The Virgin and Child with Saint Andrew and Saint Peter (unfinished), late 15th or early 16th century, oil on wood. No one knows why this panel wasn’t completed, but it offers important insight into painting practice of the 16th century. To the contemporary eye, it looks pretty fresh as is.
Joan Snyder (American, born Brooklyn, New York 1940), Heart On, 1975 oil, acrylic, paper, fabric, cheesecloth, papier mach�, mattress batting, and thread on canvas. Gift of Mr. and Mrs. Donald Rugoff, 1981. In the 1970s and 80s, painters liked revealing their process by leaving earlier stages of the paintings visible through the thin washes of paint.
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