Barbara Kruger's Artwork Speaks Truth to Power
The mass media artist has been refashioning our idioms into sharp-edged cultural critiques for three decades—and now brings her work to the Hirshhorn
- By Ron Rosenbaum
- Smithsonian magazine, July-August 2012, Subscribe
(Page 2 of 3)
But gazing at this, I missed the single most important extraction—or at least its origin. The elephant in the installation.
It was up there, dominating the top of the work, a line written in the biggest, boldest, baddest letters. The central stack of words is superimposed over the brooding eyes and the advancing shoes of a man in what looks like a black-and-white movie still. His head is exploding into what looks like a blank white mushroom cloud, and on the cloud is written: “If you want a picture of the future, imagine a boot stomping on a human face forever.”
Have a nice day, museumgoers!
Not long after, I was seated in LACMA’s sleek restaurant with Kruger, whose waterfalls of delicate curls give her a pre-Raphaelite, Laurel Canyon look. (She lives half the year in L.A. teaching at UCLA, half the year in New York City.) One of the first things I asked about was that boot-stomping line on the elevator installation. “I was glad to see someone as pessimistic as me about the future. Where’d you get that quote?”
“It’s George Orwell,” she replied. Orwell, of course! It’s been a long time since I’ve read 1984, so I’m grateful that she extracted it, this unmediated prophecy of doom from someone whose pronouncements have, uncannily and tragically, kept coming true. And it reminded me that she shares with Orwell an oracular mode of thought—and a preoccupation with language. Orwell invented Newspeak, words refashioned to become lies. Kruger works similarly, but in the opposite direction. Truespeak? Kru-speak?
“Unfortunately,” she went on to remark ominously of the Orwell quote, “it’s still very viable.”
For some, Kruger has had a forbidding aura, which is probably because of the stringent feminist content of some of her more agitprop aphorisms, such as “Your body is a battleground,” which features a woman’s face made into a grotesque-looking mask by slicing it in half and rendering one side as a negative. When I later told people I’d found Kruger down-to-earth, humorous and even kindly, those who knew her readily agreed, those who knew only her early work were a bit surprised.
But she’s made a point of being more than an ideologue. “I always say I try to make my work about how we are to one another,” she told me.
That reminded me of one of her works in which the word “empathy” stood out.
“‘How we are to each other,’” I asked. “Is that how you define empathy?”
“Oh,” she replied with a laugh, “well, too often it’s not [how we are to each other].”
“But ideally...we’re empathetic?”
“No,” she said, “I don’t know if that’s been wired into us. But I mean I’ve never been engaged with the war of the sexes. It’s too binary. The good versus the bad. Who’s the good?”
It’s a phrase she uses often: “too binary.” She’d rather work in multiple shades of meaning and the ironies that undercut them.
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Comments (8)
Wow! Great article about a great artist and, what seems to be, a very good person. I can't wait to visit the exhibition!
Posted by John Forgach on August 15,2012 | 06:55 PM
In the interview, Ms. Kruger suggests "wisdom" or "clarity" as possible substitutes for "sanity" in the pictured "Belief+Doubt=Sanity" piece. I found myself favorably struck by this piece. (Unlike my cynical reaction to "I shop therefore I am".) But I would submit one more take on the equation, one that resonates even more truthfully for me; an understanding that I learned from the great Catholic theologians: "Belief+Doubt=Faith".
Posted by Eva Hortsch on August 15,2012 | 06:30 PM
I wrote a small dissertation on BK when I was in art college in Ireland, in the early 80s. Though I now see her feminism and attack on capitalism to be rather ham-fisted, I think she helped launch a fascinating stream of women's art that was language based, perhaps even Tracy Emin. In my case, however, when I tried incorporating language in to my visual (albeit in a more filmy way) I came close to actually failing my degree. Shame on you then, National College of Art and Design, Dublin!
Posted by molly burke kirova on August 3,2012 | 06:06 AM
We, who went to Weequahic, are the most fortunate! Beate Sondhelm Block, Weequahic, January 1943
Posted by Beate Sonhelm Block on July 29,2012 | 08:28 PM
I grew up with Barbara in Newark, NJ. She lived around the corner from me and attended Hawthorne Avenue Grammer School. I remember her as an extremely smart, but quiet girl with tons of freckels on her face. We also attended junior high school and high school together. Occaisionaly she would help me with my homework and for a while I had a big crush on her, but she never new that. It's great to hear of her success.
Posted by EDDIE KEIL KLEIN on July 29,2012 | 08:28 AM
"Kruger keeps her finger tightly pressed to the pulse of popular culture." Maybe if she keeps it there a little longer and presses a little harder, it will die. From this article I take it the artist uses pat phrases and questions their meanings to us and why we use them rather than explaining what we think unlike the author of this article who relied on so many of these phrases and references to pop culture. For example, in describing her hair as "Pre-Raphaelite", and comparing her to Laurel Canyon: the color is in the paintings but other than that, this is a useless comparison and as to whom Laurel Canyon is, I don't care.
Posted by Kelly Adams on July 15,2012 | 10:41 AM
Do I hear an echo of T.S. Eliot in Ms. Kruger's work? We've been down that road of hip cynicism before and it yielded nothing except awful pedantry and ennui. Leonardo and Michelangelo both lived in spiritual vacuous times. Nonetheless, they extracted power and spiritual beauty from their world, reflected in their work. Art endures: cynicism, however faddish or fabulous, is forgettable. To Mr.Smith, who was it that said, "Doubt wisely?"
Posted by Lawrence Mohr on July 13,2012 | 11:02 PM
I do like how the subject of this article compares atheists to fundamentalists. My statement, as an atheist, that I see no evidence for a god is exactly like the religious fundamentalist insisting that woman remain in the home, or that gay marriage is an abomination, or that all Muslims are terrorists. Doubt is exactly what brought me to that conclusion, and I try and take a skeptical attitude towards everything in my life. To claim that any atheist is completely certain about anything seems like a caricature to me. Perhaps Ms. Kruger has spent a little too much time listening to religious fundamentalist's opinions of atheists, and not enough time actually talking to atheists. She might find we are a lot more like her than she thinks.
Posted by Matt Smith on July 6,2012 | 07:51 AM