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ONCE UPON A TIME IN MEXICO
Lucy
Michaels pulls apart the threads of the Cancun story and weaves
a tapestry of downright bullying, outright resistance and tentative
hope.
NEWS
Do you want the government to medicate
you without your consent? Should Unocal be prosecuted? Tricky questions...
Plus: Green Gloves save the planet; Nike saves itself; a fascinating
insight into the House of Commons, and the latest on UN attempts
to curb the corporations.
EXCUSE ME, BUT ARE
YOU GOING TO THE ARMS FAIR?
Corporate Watch at DSEi, talking to people
making money in ways they wouldn't want to explain to their children
(unless they disliked them intensely).
ART SCHMART
“Stick a can of Carslberg
in that cornfield, will you, Vincent?” Justin Schamotta investigates
corporate artists.
BABYLONIAN TIMES
it's funnier than you think.
Diary
Download pdf
NB 800KB file
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Art, schmart
The Commodification of Self-Expression
Justin Schamotta
‘All art is propaganda,’ declared Mexican
muralist Diego Rivera. True to his word, when commissioned by Nelson Rockefeller
to create a mural for the lobby of the self-glorifying Rockefeller Center
in New York, Rivera depicted a 63ft by 17ft workers’ rebellion against
the cancer of capitalism - represented literally as cancer. As if this
wasn’t enough, he also felt compelled to add a perfectly rendered
portrait of Lenin in the middle of it.
This was in 1933, but such blatant refusal to compromise personal ideals
has become increasingly rare as the boundaries between art and business
blur. Mainstream political parties implore you to vote using stencilled
graffiti. Diesel and Gap create a line in ‘protester-chic’.
The BBC lifts a spray-painter to advertise the new, revamped Canterbury
Tales - the list goes on. So, it is hardly surprising that, for today’s
young urban artists, the move from expressing their own ideas and feelings
to expressing those of money-thirsty corporations is often a small and
acceptable one.
‘A lot of artists are getting disillusioned with how best to move
their careers forward,’ says Ben Reed, art director of Spearfish
Ltd. ‘If you want to get paid then the money has to come from somewhere.
You have to meet the brand halfway.’ The very thought of graffiti
artists considering themselves to have a ‘career’ is in itself
a telling move from the art form’s roots.
Spearfish is one of the many new advertising enterprises being set up
by members of traditionally anti-corporate sub-cultures. Their attitude
is part of the post-ironic ‘corporations are here to stay so I might
as well engage with them on my own terms - I’m too clever to be
sucked in’. They stretch from musicians’ collectives playing
corporate events through to graffiti artists promoting the likes of Red
Bull and Stella Artois.
‘The thing with urban art is that it gives everyone a voice,’
says Jon from a Manchester-based art collective aiming to ‘raise
the standard of design in politics and the amount of politics in design’.
‘Especially people who have no other means of it being heard. It
came from the poorer marginalised communities but now it’s being
used to sell them stuff which they can’t afford.’
Art as a vessel for hawking a company’s products is an old game.
The world’s first advertising agency was opened in 1841 by the unlikely-sounding
Volney B Palmer. Since then all manner of artists have succumbed to the
corporate green. ‘Advertising is the greatest art form of the twentieth
century,’ declared Canadian social scientist, Marshall McLuhan,
and many still believe him.
In 1931, Coca-Cola commissioned an illustrator by the
name of Haddon Sundblom to develop an advertising image to encourage people
to drink coke during the winter months (it was until then considered a
summer beverage). Inspired by Clement Clark Moore’s 1822 poem ‘A
visit from St. Nicholas,’ which describes the toy-maker as ‘chubby
and plump, a right jolly old elf,’ Sundblom created the modern day
image of Santa Claus. Ironically, what gave Sundblom’s Santa credibility
was the mass media’s portrayal of it as a part of an ancient folk
tradition - a mythical hero unchanged by consumer culture.
And this is still Coca-Cola’s, and virtually all other corporation’s,
strategy - take what’s happening at the moment, repackage it and
then pretend it’s still the same thing. ‘I have just completed
installing a major canvas (30ft x 9ft) into Coca-Cola’s London headquarters,’
says graffiti artist, Temper (aka Aaron Bird). Temper has also been paid
to ‘tag’ 50 million cans of Sprite and work for Saatchi &
Saatchi Advertising, Airwalk and Allsports. He received around £9,000
for the Coca-Cola job. ‘The piece is visible from the street,’
he insists, by way of apology.
The irony of graffiti being appreciated as a ‘proper’
art form by the establishment is sometimes lost. One minute you’re
a systematic vandal looking at five years inside; the next you’re
a Soho star celebrated in private drinking clubs around the capital. The
upcoming anti-social behaviour law will see graffiti further criminalised,’
says Jon, ‘but the corporates can pay for space in urban environments
which is just chequebook vandalism. On one hand graffiti is unacceptable
but when it’s used in a safe manner like kid’s TV or in adverts
it becomes acceptable.’
Corporations don’t, of course, like graffiti.
They don’t like anything. They’re corporations. Its interest
to them lies squarely in its appeal to a prime retail demographic - white,
middle-class kids. Get those kids to think your brand is cool and you’re
away. The trouble with this from the artist’s point of view is that
brands are innately controlling. ‘We had commercial commissions
from Carling for £1,500 a piece to go up in student’s unions,’
says Spearfish’s Ben. ‘Each poster had to incorporate a can
of Carling in it somewhere.’ And it’s always the same. ‘When
Guinness wanted a commission, they didn’t want anything that spoke
politically about Ireland,’ says Temper. ‘That would have
been commercial suicide.’ The supposedly grassroots Urban Discipline
event in Germany features acknowledgements to the sponsors, Eastpak and
Carhartt, on each piece of work displayed there.
Even after you’ve done your work, things can
still go awry. Since working with Airwalk, Temper claims that his artwork
and designs were modified in-house and re-produced without permission
or payment. ‘You take a company like Airwalk, with their history
and roots in street culture and heritage in skateboarding and it would
be hard to understand why they would choose to disrespect these cultures
and also their consumers.’
That corporations want input is hardly surprising,
after all, they are paying for it. What is surprising is that artists
feel obliged to strive for this kind of deal. ‘When artists do their
work for nothing it’s not furthering the art form and it doesn’t
get taken seriously,’ insists Ben rather conveniently forgetting
about Van Gogh, say, or Beethoven. ‘Damien Hirst and the like get
£1 million for a piece. I can’t see why we shouldn’t
get that too.’
One ruinous aspect of this mode of thinking is the corporate boundaries
which are invariably set when things are done for money. Those that won't,
or can't, reside within these boundaries don't get the money and suddenly
find themselves marginalised and dispirited. Spearfish, among others,
have reached the end of this murky road. ‘It’s a struggle
to find artists good enough to present to my clients,’ muses Ben.
A far bigger worry is the fact that a new generation
of artists is unconsciously training itself not to challenge established
perceptions but rather to tailor its art to some worthless corporate vision.
Jack Napier of the Billboard Liberation Front agrees: ‘With increasing
frequency they apprentice to the advertisers; no longer needing to falsely
maintain the distinction between ‘fine’ and ‘commercial’
art. The most successful artists are those who can most successfully sell
their art.’
That this is happening at a time when even classics such as Picasso’s
Guernica (which hangs near the entrance of the UN Security Council) are
considered offensive enough to be covered to prevent them being used as
backdrops during photo-opportunities, is a truly scary situation. As existing
art is censored or hoarded away by overzealous collectors and new art
rapidly learns to regulate itself for maximum commercial value, we’re
unwittingly opening ourselves to whatever terrible dreams the advertisers
create for us.
Links
See: www.uhc-collective.org.uk
for a range of politicised stickers, stencils, flyposters, subverts and
banners.
See: www.randomartists.org
Art collective/network who exhibit in squatted spaces in London
See: www.spearfishltd.co.uk
to learn corporate-speak.
See: www.billboardliberation.com
for tips on reclaiming corporatised outdoor space.
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