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 3 of 3)
All of which brings us to her upcoming installation invasion of Washington and that potent, verboten word she wants to bring to Washington’s attention. The magic word with the secret power that is like garlic to Dracula in a town full of partisans. The word is “DOUBT.”
“I’d only been in Washington a few times, mainly for antiwar marches and pro-choice rallies,” she said. “But I’m interested in notions of power and control and love and money and death and pleasure and pain. And Richard [Koshalek, the director of the Hirshhorn] wanted me to exercise candor without trying to be ridiculously...I think I sometimes see things that are provocative for provocations’ sake.” (A rare admission for an artist—self-doubt.) “So I’m looking forward to bringing up these issues of belief, power and doubt.”
The official title she’s given her installation is Belief+Doubt. In an earlier work (pictured below), she had used the phrase Belief+Doubt=Sanity.
I asked her what had happened to “sanity.” Had she given up on it?
“You can say ‘clarity,’ you can say ‘wisdom,’” she replied, but if you look at the equation closely, adding doubt to belief is actually subtracting something from belief: blind certainty.
The conversation about doubt turned to agnosticism, the ultimate doubt.
She made clear there’s an important distinction between being an atheist and being an agnostic, as she is: Atheists don’t doubt! “Atheists have the ferociousness of true believers—which sort of undermines their position!” she said.
“In this country,” she added, “it’s easier to be a pedophile than an agnostic.”
Both sides—believer and atheist—depend on certainty to hold themselves together. A dynamic that also might explain the deadlock in politics in Washington: both sides refusing to admit the slightest doubt about their position, about their values, about the claim to have all the answers.
“Whose values?” is the Kruger extraction at the very summit of her Hirshhorn installation—and its most subversive question. With the absence of doubt, each side clings to its values, devaluing the other side’s values, making any cooperation an act of betrayal.
“Everybody makes this values claim,” she pointed out, “that their values are the only values. Doubt is almost grounds for arrest—and we’re still perilously close to that in many ways, you know.”
And so in its way the Hirshhorn installation may turn out to be genuinely subversive. Introducing doubt into polarized D.C. political culture could be like letting loose a mutation of the swine flu virus.
Let’s hope it’s contagious.
Subscribe now for more of Smithsonian's coverage on history, science and nature.









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