8.30.21 — Suitable for Children
Niki de Saint Phalle may have been the most child-friendly artist ever. She filled parks and playgrounds with the shapes of real and fantastic animals. Rather than a museum sculpture garden, she preferred Central Park’s Conservatory Garden, where she installed her sculpture and handed out balloons to the kids.
Her MoMA PS1 retrospective is an enormous lost opportunity, especially given the enormous clout of the Museum of Modern Art. The architect of parks and playgrounds dared you to come out to play. So why not recreate an installation in a New York park? One must see her instead through sculpture and documentation. Smart critics have raved, but could they rely just as much on vivid memories?
You will have to trust to her gift for pandering to while provoking you.
When she set to work on the fight against AIDS, her posters speak of boyfriends and condoms, but the illustrations look awfully innocent for those in need of either one. She called a long-running series in fiberglass her Nanas, or girls. Just how suitable, though, were they for children? Could she have led directly to the childishness of artists like KAWS?
At MoMA PS1, through September 6, you might be hard pressed to find work suitable for adults, but look again. Saint Phalle started out with Tirs, or shootings, which had her taking a rifle to her art, releasing paint spatters as its blood. Her retrospective, like her garden, centers on a huge sculpture with exaggerated “tits and ass,” and the playground slide is the tongue of a dragon. Nanas means girls only as demeaning slang for attractive young women—and Emile Zola’s fictional Nana grew up to become a whore. Her Golem for Jerusalem takes its name from a demon endowed with human life, and critics worried that it would teach aggression. She funded it all by merchandising at that, another unfortunate trend in contemporary art, with a line of perfume.
A bemused headline spoke for the proper and pious: qui a autorizé cette “horror”? I wish I could take credit for having authorized the horror, but I was only a child myself, and anyway I worry more about the grownups in the room. I have the same feeling faced with such bad girls and bad boys in contemporary art as Paul McCarthy, Jeff Koons, and Mike Kelley. While MoMA PS1 has a soft spot for overcrowded shows, the two hundred works reflect an artist with little patience for restraint, and they come padded with no end of photos and studies. I breezed through in record time. She often collaborated with her second husband, Jean Tinguely, whose kinetic structure self-destructed for an eager audience at the Museum of Modern Art (or at least started to do so until the Fire Department showed up), and memories of her work may self-destruct even faster.
For all that, Saint Phalle combined the genuinely entertaining with a dark side worth remembering. She had her shootings, her dragons, and her work in the face of AIDS. She also had demons of her own. Born in 1930, the French girl grew up on the Upper East Side of New York, where she went to a privileged school and fell in love with Central Park. Yet she had her horrors, too, including child abuse. The artist who proclaimed that la mort n’existe pas (or death does not exist) spent her adult life in agony, from arthritis and worse.
No wonder she sought relief in the hopes of children. She also sought relief in the mystical, like a tarot deck of her own devising. “Order and chaos,” she proclaimed, “are united in the eternal.” Most of all, she sought relief in obsessive creation. She got the idea for her Tarot Garden after enjoying the excess of a cathedral by Antoni Gaudi in Barcelona, and its five acres found a home at last in Tuscany in 1998. And then she kept extending it, with a monumental figure here and a maze there, until her death in 2002.
The curators, Ruba Katrib with Josephine Graf, make no bones about the pain. They include a gilded altar to Jesus, snakes, bears, and bats. They argue, too, for Saint Phalle’s place on the cutting edge. She collaborated with Jasper Johns, Robert Rauschenberg, Larry Rivers, and John Cage. Like Tinguely and Yves Klein, she joined France’s Nouveau Realisme. If she departs from them all, she wished merely to make the mix more unruly.
There is no getting around the childish and the commercial in this Paradis Fantastique. The show comes just as KAWS, another merchandiser who harps on cartoons, has his run at the Brooklyn Museum. Still, we were all children once, and Saint Phalle’s mysticism came wrapped up in her feminism. She wrote letters to Clarice, her favorite Nana, and one enters an installation through a female crotch in order, she reasoned, to return to the womb. She asked only, she said, that “you give me a few seconds of your eternity.” Now if only that were enough.
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