Thursday, June 21, 2012

Hmm …

… Jed Perl: How Hilton Kramer Got Lost In The Culture Wars | The New Republic. (Hat tip, Dave Lull.)


Rereading The Age of the Avant-Garde and The Revenge of the Philistines (what terrific titles!), I find myself wondering if the boldface simplifications of Hilton’s later polemics came out of his frustration at how little his most judicious judgments had done to affect the course of events. After years spent weighing the virtues of countless artists and exhibitions, he found all of his careful calculations swept away by the onslaught of Pop and the transformation of museums into funhouses. Who can wonder that Hilton lost his cool? Who can wonder that the complicator became a simplifier? I know I should not have been surprised. But I did find it strange to watch, beginning with the white-hot controversies around the funding of the National Endowment for the Arts, as this extraordinarily subtle man stood shoulder to shoulder with right-wing ideologues who cared as little for Mondrian as they did for Mapplethorpe. Hilton may have imagined that his own taste was too fine to be compromised by their outrageous crudity. Despite all he knew about the dumbing-down of the media, he underestimated the power of the press to coarsen his own ideas.

Apparently, poor Jed is too young or too naive to know that the enemy of my enemy is my friend. Also, Kramer was savvy enough to know that there isn't all that much difference between a right-wing ideologue and left-wing ideologue. Maybe some day Jed will pick up on that as well — if he ever shakes off being, well, a left-wing ideologue.

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