Saturday, October 16, 2021

As Real As We Need




During the years that my sidelight career was selling original Robert Rauschenberg paintings, I tried to catch up on my limited knowledge of abstract expressionist history.

Inevitably, I was drawn to Rauschenberg's "Erased de Kooning Drawing," an experiment about the limits of art.

At the time the two artists combined on the piece, I was exploring how to erase my own writings and drawings as a first-grader in school. At the time, we were told that we were to erase our "mistakes" as part of the process of learning how to write and draw correctly.

Rauschenberg, of course, had a very different purpose in mind when he asked Willem de Kooning to produce a drawing that he would erase. He sought to discover whether an artwork could be produced entirely through erasure— the removal of what was once there, sort of like creating a ghost.

It would not be a mistake at all, but an act entirely on purpose. And the result would be a work based only on the memory of what used to be. 

This is, after all, very similar to what happens when we lose all of our possessions to fire, theft, loss or a conscious decision to eliminate them from the premises.

It also is what happens when somebody we love dies.

If you prefer an evil twist, it is also what happens when autocrats try to erase history, criminals try to cover up crimes, or genocidal maniacs attempt to remove an entire people from the planet.

In the case of the actual de Kooning drawing, Rauschenberg and Jasper Johns carefully matted and framed the work, with Johns inscribing the following words below the now-obliterated piece:

"ERASED de KOONING DRAWING"
"ROBERT RAUSCHENBERG"
"1953"

The psychologically loaded history of the creation remains otherwise unknowable.

But as long as we remain aware of what happened, what was once drawn, and what was once seen, it is as real as we need it to be.

***

THE HEADLINES:

A record number of Americans are quitting their jobs. (WP)

Key to Biden’s Climate Agenda Likely to Be Cut Because of Manchin Opposition -- The West Virginia Democrat told the White House he is firmly against a clean electricity program that is the muscle behind the president’s plan to battle climate change. (NYT)

Green sky at night over Taiwan’s islands heralds a different kind of squid game (WP)

Some Sell Children as Afghanistan Sinks Into Destitution (WSJ)

* The Islamic State group claimed responsibility for a deadly suicide bombing on a Shiite mosque in southern Afghanistan that killed 47 people and wounded scores more. Relatives laid the bodies of the victims to rest Saturday and called on the Taliban to protect them. (AP)


Afghan Uyghurs whose families fled China now fear the Taliban could deport them (NPR)

F.D.A. Panel Unanimously Recommends Johnson & Johnson Booster Shots (NYT)

The Unvaccinated May Not Be Who You Think -- Science can find a cure for our diseases, but not for our societal ills. (NYT)

Why the Salesforce CEO wants to redefine capitalism by pushing for social change (NPR)

An obstacle to large-scale bitcoin mining is finding enough cheap energy to run the huge, power-gobbling computer arrays that create and transact cryptocurrency. One mining operation in central New York came up with a novel solution that has alarmed environmentalists. (AP)

The great pandemic work-from-home experiment was a remarkable success (WP)

* La NiƱa is coming. Here's what that means for winter weather in the U.S. (NPR)

VIDEO: NASA to Launch a Robotic Archaeologist Named Lucy -- The spacecraft is designed to study clusters of asteroids along Jupiter’s orbital path, known as the Trojan swarms, as it seeks to answer questions about the origins of the solar system and how life might have emerged on Earth. (AP)

This dead star offers a glimpse of our solar system's eventual fate (CNN)

Darwin family microscope to be sold at auction (Reuters)

Intergalactic Animal Rights Groups Condemn Use Of Brutal, Unsanitary Planet To Raise Human Meat (The Onion)

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