South-East
Regional Artist
“There
is no shape of one’s career; there is only understanding one’s self, and
forgiving.”
-from Aphorisms II
“Every
made thing is a metaphor for the having-been-madeness of itself.”
-from South-East Regional
Aphorisms I
I must begin by expressing my relief
at the opportunity to prepare a chapter-length version of this work; the dual
gesture towards exhaustiveness and objectivity required in a longer format (the
dual burden, honestly, and the dual ruse) has given me no end of soul-ache and
trouble in a task that I already find difficult in a nearly metaphysical
register. Approaching Arthur now is something like approaching Pound’s dynastic
temple, and to be smiled upon with the utter equanimity of the master sends me
spiraling back to more than fifteen years ago, when I was already grappling
with the mantle that he left untenanted in the aftermath of his passing. Of
course the editorializing that appears in my incidental remarks throughout
allows for a bit of compression here, some revisionary adjustment there, and
perhaps some rather grandiose critical salti mortale when necessary, but in truth it
would be disingenuous to imagine that it could be otherwise. As evidence, I
need only point you to my forthcoming South-East Regional Artist: Arthur
White’s Art-/Life- World, of which disaster I felt I had washed my hands
before it even finished its passage through publication. Here at least, though
the whole thing is an ungodly generic hybrid, I can begin with the bones of a
narrative art history, and then proceed with an altogether more adequate, more
personal, and more polysemic rendition, one closer in genre to what nineteenth-century
compilers referred to as Remains. If you don’t care for the farce, perhaps
you’ll enjoy it as tragedy. I must only insist not to be read as hagiography in
earnest: to the extent that Arthur is indeed great, may I be seen as noble; to
the extent that he is monstrous, so may I be seen as unwhole.
Those
familiar with White's work tend to regard him foremost as a painter, although I
would argue that much of the impetus powering the reception and recognition of
his work comes from his charisma and from the intensely searching and
reflective nature of his few published interviews and written works. The first
and single most important show of both his curatorial and artistic career
remains his exhibition "The South-East Regional Artist" at the 1982
Knoxville World's Fair, a venue so far outside even the most regional
backwaters of the art-world circuit that very few can claim to have seen the
show at all except via a few poor-quality catalogue reproductions and archival
documents. This state of affairs has not hindered White's growing prominence in
art-historical narratives and in a few very recent auctions, and in fact has
probably helped establish something of a halo of myth or authenticity--that coarse
X-factor of the modern information economy--around his career. White can be
seen as one of a number of mid-century painters who transitioned from a
large-scale, de rigueur Abstract Expressionism to a far more ambivalent
and even strained engagement with figuration, although from the biographical dates
it should be clear that this trajectory is complicated as well by the extreme
lateness of his participation in that particular generational struggle. In
White's case, the shift came not only as the stylistic rejection of Western post-academic
painting or Greenbergian modernism, but a more deeply-lived turn away from some
idea of centralization, or cosmopolitanism, or indeed larger-scale movements or
discourses of any kind; though by no means reactionary, naive, or primitivist,
his was an idiosyncratic strain of humanism, for lack of a better term, a
localism and traditionalism that nevertheless derived a kind of clarity and
dark energy from what it was not, a kind of missionary activism continuously
brimming over its self-imposed limitations of scale and purview. In sum the oeuvre
is eclectic and admittedly uneven, in part because of White's habitual
insistence on working on the road and in other artists' studios, in short and
provisional but intense bursts of activity, and because of his uncanny
porousness and restlessness as both thinker and practitioner. While his life
and work seem poised today--nearly two decades after his death--to profit a
handful of insiders and speculators, the larger impact of his work and ideas in
the cultural mainstream is destined to remain miniscule.
Arthur
White was born in Huntsville in September of 1958 and spent his early childhood
in northern Alabama "among the dams," as he liked to say. Both his
mother and father were engineers, or perhaps more accurately
engineers-turned-suits, and were members of that orderly and progress-minded
middle class of intellectuals who helped modernize the agrarian portions of
mid-century interior America with a secularized Protestant zeal. Functionaries
for a priestly class of Southern technocrats, they seem to have been influential
members of the pan-regional shadow government that since the New Deal had been
aggressively reshaping the greater South outside the purview of the public
political sphere; from all accounts they were an open-minded, energetic, and
mobile family, torch-bearers for a particular notion of the human spirit, with
a framed group portrait in the kitchen of a small group of gray-suited figures
(Arthur's mother the only one in a dress) arranged respectfully around a seated
David Lillenthal. Arthur's youth seems to have been happy, typical of a relatively
literal-minded and aspirational caste, and in his later life he would rank his
first fifteen years quite low in his personal mythology. As a high-schooler at
Clark Prep in Atlanta he took drawing classes with a teacher named George Eckhard,
a one-time Black Mountain attendee from whom Arthur dated his exposure to a
universe of ideas and narratives beyond the ones piped in by TV, magazines, and
radio to his parents' study. From the beginning a seeker and theorizer rather
than a technician, however, the young Arthur seems to have been more deeply
transformed by afternoons among Eckhard's art books and personal library than
by any blossoming experience of potential at the end of a charcoal stick.
It
was in his early twenties that White's life and career began to take the form
for which he would subsequently be recognized. In the late 70s he made the easy
leap to the university in Athens, where he pursued a vaguely pre-Law degree in
History while mostly hanging around the photography labs and downtown bars,
reinventing himself as a big-living southern Outlaw type and confrontationally
resisting affiliation with any of the tiny college town's cliques or
subcultures. He was already painting seriously in those years (some of the
larger abstract canvasses that would be unearthed after his early death for
some unilluminating retrospectives) but was mostly engaged with a messy and
somewhat punk-inflected social photography that seems to have been motivated as
much by the entrée it afforded into the divergent and well-insulated Athenian
social worlds than by any kind of photographic rigor in its own right. It was
this latter aspect of his persona/practice that would lead rapidly to the major
early-career milestone of the 1982 World's Fair. With his parents’ connections at Oak Ridge and the TVA headquarters,
the ambitious young White heard early on about the plans coalescing around
“Jake’s Fair,” a downtown Knoxville real-estate scam á la Chinatown dressed
up as an International Exposition on Nuclear Energy. Jake Butcher himself and
the rest of the local overlords had more important details to pin down than the
cultural program, and so when a well-dressed Arthur approached them with a
Prospectus for an Arts Pavilion focusing on The South-East Regional Artist and
a sheaf of well-selected references, he was allotted what at the time seemed to
him a perversely large sum of money and carte blanche as to what,
exactly, the 1982 World’s Fair Arts Pavilion—just north of the fission-inspired
glare of the Sunsphere—would become.
With over a year of lead time,
Childe White got to work spending the money; much of it would fund a frugal but
extensive Grand Tour of the greater Southeast: New Orleans, Memphis, Louisville,
the Everglades, to name only a few; Georgia's coastal islands, Southwest
Virginia's chain of secluded Blue Ridge hamlets, the Alabama Gulf. He sought
out artists of all persuasions, exhausted his contacts, drank up the lore at
countless roadhouses, and followed up new leads; though perhaps willfully
idiosyncratic, White was young and tireless and truly committed to his task,
and in the end it is actually difficult to imagine someone fulfilling the
commission any better. Method was at the heart of the project: when approaching
a prospective artist, locally eminent weaver, or renegade sculptor, White would
insist on commissioning a totally new work for the Fair, and then would himself
work alongside the artist for the duration of the project, sometimes weeks, doggedly
creating his own crude or sometimes surprisingly accomplished version to
accompany the commissioned piece. The show therefore came to be half White's, and
to contain its own outsider doubling within itself; the entire year and ultimately
the show in its final form became White's apprenticeship, his journey of
self-dissolution into the far corners of his adopted fiefdom and his final
demiurgic reappearance in Knoxville as the South-East Regional Artist
incarnate, grand representative to the Fair and metonym to the World. By the
March installation date there were a staggering sixty-two pieces of art
(thirty-one of them by White)—pottery, sculpture, paintings, prints, drawings, videos,
and all manners of craft-, wood-, metal-, and fiber-work—all completed within
the previous sixteen months. If the conceptual strangeness and richness of the
whole enterprise was mostly unremarked by the participants and perhaps only
intuitively, dimly appreciated by White himself, there was nevertheless a
landmark, jubilee feeling to the proceedings of the whole Fair, if for no other
reason than because White tended to gravitate towards those artists who were
also otherwise characters, local heroes, or freaks in their own right, and
because their rolling arrivals during the summer of 1982 turned the Pavilion
into an ever-unfolding party and social experiment of epic proportions. The six
months of the Fair was one long all-night session, a tome of social history,
the beating heart of a tapestry of pilgrimages—and yet at the same time, as a kind
of rite, invisible to uninitiated. There were scattered attempts at greater
publicity, both earnest and tongue-in-cheek, like one night's drunken and
obscene letter-writing campaigns to the Artforum
offices, but in the end the regional artists were their own audience.
By the end of its run, the
exhibition was unanimously considered a success by local reporters and town folk
who mostly would never give it a second thought, and on the first of November,
the day after the Fair’s Halloween closing date, over 180 federal agents raided
all twenty-nine branches of Jake Butcher’s banking empire. Going down for
massive banking fraud and necessitating a historic FDIC payout of $382 million,
Butcher was forced to satisfy his creditors by auctioning off all of his possessions—among
them, according to the brazen and byzantine paper trail of the previous few
years, the pieces comprising the Arts Pavilion—and amid all of the small-town
scandal and back-room proceedings that engulfed Knoxville for the entire next
year and more, White’s art was either destroyed or purchased by unknown buyers,
almost all of whom are lost to the historical record and unlikely to resurface.
White himself (and his inner circle of collaborators) made out handsomely enough
with the original funding—he referred to the whole episode as his “knighting”
by the liege-lord of empty speculation, “Sir Oudeis”—and until his death twenty
years later he never worked regularly again, aside from a scattering of
temporary gigs and short stints teaching middle school history.
The rest of White’s career was
marked by nearly constant artistic activity and an equally constant and willful
self-seclusion, punctuated by occasional publications and shows that gradually
garnered him an increasing national recognition. Throughout his life he
traveled regularly and for long stretches at a time, attaching himself to
whatever coterie, area, or landmark he found most salubrious to his work at any
given moment; he habitually worked on his art either in the studios of other
artists or in improvised workshops while on the road. Some of the more notable
milestones include the publication of Aphorisms I and II in 1989
and 1992, the second made to coincide with the Down Town show in Chapel
Hill, North Carolina. Collaborative works—not only paintings, but mixed media,
film, performance, and audio projects—turned up throughout the 90s in a
staggering range of locations and venues; cataloguing these even somewhat
exhaustively would involve a massive recovery project in its own right. A
subset of those works and some otherwise unexhibited short films were shown as
part of a 1998 group exhibition at Remey in Manhattan (the only non-Southern
showing of White’s work during his lifetime; he visited New York but never
attended the show); and the largest ever gathering of White's paintings and
works on paper was shown after his death in 2003 at a generous-spirited but
poorly organized exhibit called King Arthur at the Lamar Dodd Center in
Athens. By the time of his death, whatever prominence he had begun to acquire
had already faded, and the indissoluble “regional” tag on his name and work
relegated him to the overlooked annals of local writers and academics during a
time when national-level art publications were occupied with genuflections to
big Theory.
Though of course White's career is
often characterized, when described at all, in terms of those infuriating
catch-all labels 'outsider' and 'visionary,' my own inclination is to see him
in terms of an atavistic return of manifesto-driven modernism, inflected
perhaps by the more widespread countercultural social utopianism of the of his
slightly older generational peers. Arthur's greatest impact, as I try to make
clear below, far exceeded his output of discrete art works; he was a lightning
rod, a polarizer and organizer who forced those around him into polemic action
of their own. At the same time, in his elaborate and almost theological
philosophical schemes there was something of the anti-technological organicism
of the New Agrarians, although ironized and hardened by his ambivalence
regarding his parents' careers, and one might even say—in his films especially,
with their emphasis on structure and anti-discursivity—a subtle Romanticism
that he would vehemently have disavowed. In short, in his earthiness and
earnestness—be it at the level of form, subject matter, dialect, market
positioning, politics, or anything else—I find him one entirely convincing and
consequential dialectical turn beyond ninety-nine percent of his more
successful or remarked-upon contemporaries, and certainly beyond his
detractors. Novelty! Context! The scourge of an artist unfortunate enough reach
maturity in the 1990s, that most blind and blinding of decades. In the great
history that will not be written, in the great romance of ideas which
interpenetrates us all, Arthur will be found to have been holding more threads
than any of us.
Although I am partial to the Aphorisms in their self-contained and
haiku-like ability to suggest whole worlds, if I make only one intervention it
would be to insist—absolutely insist, in conclusion—upon the essential humanity
on display in the figurative oils, of the eye, the composition, the lineaments
of the figures. The posture, grace, bearing, and weight of the human forms is
where, to me, Arthur reveals his genius most clearly, and when I encounter
responses to White's "naïve" or "strong" hand, my instinct
is not to rejoin or even to bristle; I can only wonder whether we can see the
same canvas, only long to meet someone else from whom these
to-me-incomprehensible scales have fallen.
My frustration, and my premise here,
is that no catalogue raisonné howsoever devoted or meticulous may represent
that which fundamentally escapes the operations of history-writing—that is,
history itself—and yet, the impetus to make the attempt falls heavily upon we
whose attempts at identity revolve around the search for origins. And so it is
that a combination of memoir, eulogy, archival estate management, and
second-hand reportage—what I have come to think of as Arthur’s Remains—can
come to approximate, I hope, the general and extra-literary sense of the man,
the Charakteristik, that (it dawns on me continuously) must survive only
in me.
In my early thirties, after Arthur’s
death, I lived in New York for a time; I had friends enough in the city by then
to make things somewhat manageable. What I worked on is only partially
recoverable to memory now, but I remember most of all being animated by an
optimistic if perhaps dully high-minded sense of my own impending flowering: much
serious talk, much laying away of notes and fragments against the future as an
animal might down its nest. A good deal of conceptual photography in short
series, unconsciously gravitating towards the minimum required volitional
investment for the emergence of the auteur signature. Most of all, for me, a
sense of business and duty progressively, incrementally mobilized towards a vaguely
defined collective goal; someone would eventually point and say to the world,
“Look.” At the time I was naturally quite haunted by Arthur’s recent death and
the sense that without his galvanizing influence an entire communal way of
being might evaporate; this sensation I experienced with the ultimately
fatalistic urgency of the anthropologist watching the extinction of an oral
tradition, and could find no way around it. Over the years I intermittently
returned to considering written pieces on the man and his work, either modest
or epic, pop or pseudo-academic, and even spit-balled with a few magazines and
publishers—some of which meetings were truly in the service of realizing the
project and some of which I merely used by way of introduction to a circle in
which I had some interest—but ultimately I did nothing.
Like all ambitious people I
eventually discovered a path forward that was fundamentally cagey enough to
serve my purposes and to insure myself against any eventuality. Through some
extremely subtle and well-distributed but finally still shameful wheedling I
was granted access to a nicer SoHo space than I had any reason to expect, in
order to put on a solo show that I would call “The South-East Regional Artist.”
Arthur was at the time almost entirely unknown outside of a one-degree
separation from his willfully anti-metropolitan circle of friends, and my conflicted
but ultimately self-serving plan was simply to repeat a selection of his work
as my own; the line between homage, ventriloquism, adaptation, and rip-off would
be ambiguous enough that the entire gesture could construed as signifying
within a contemporary art register, within one problematic or another, whether
the ruse remained undetected or conjured heady reportage or erupted into
scandal. All the better, in fact, in the latter case; and so I would be Arthur
reprised, the South-East Regional Artist by détournement.
The crux of the recontextualization
involved transposing some of what Arthur organized under the heading of “dipole
forms” (basically just a group of people hanging out, albeit in heightened
intensity) into the key of the New York City Happening. Of course I had no
problem filling the space itself—no paintings, but wryly Arcadian photos taken
either by Arthur himself or me during the Arthur-years; some of the more
Raymond-Williams-lite aphorisms stenciled monolithically onto the gallery
walls—but the core of the show would be the performances, the situations, the
(I hoped) slow and dawning self-induction of the attendees into the very kind
of community of ramshackle seekers that Arthur had forged about him. It was at
the very first off-site performance, however, a rehash of one of Arthur’s outings
with the FootPrints Local Travel Agency which, in my reiteration, involved a
rather long trip to Red Hook and some poorly planned amphibious elements, that
I realized that the whole calculation had been off from the start and that the outing
and maybe even the entire show would be a failure. I wasn’t able to attract
much of a group beyond my immediate circle of friends, and the situationism
simply failed to take hold—and yet it wasn’t simply the make-up of the audience:
the context was too overdetermined, and my persona too provisional, no matter
how stridently in-character. My general embarrassment and the fact that the
entire experience sunk without a ripple into the bustling and all-swallowing
maw of the New York scene should go without saying; the revolution it produced
in me, however, and the cheerless, Bloomian distortion of Arthur as he had
existed in memory—fundamentally raffish, exacting but tolerant—into the
terribly placid and Kung-like image of my own thwarted idea of myself, I
unequivocally pinpoint as the rupture which would lead to my retreat from New
York—as locale, community, concept—and the gradually drying-up of my own
practice as an Arthurian.
I first met Arthur at what had been
described to me as a “snow party,” but which I would later find out was only
one iteration in a loosely related series of events collectively known as the
Polar 500. Arthur had a large dose of the old-time showman in him, and
everything he did was wreathed in the vaguely commercialized tones of the
serial, the multiple, or the long-running folk tradition. Gatherings that could
only ever materialize a single time, events that would never even make it out
of the planning phase of a late-night bull session were denominated the “first
annual.” He wasn’t all that much older than me, and it surprises and galls me
somewhat to recall that after my initial awe at his charisma subsided he always
seemed more like an older brother than the archetype of the looming forebear
that my current, wrackingly Oedipal perspective might so far have suggested.
That particular day he was wearing heavy canvas pants and a shirt of nearly the
same color, a beard, and some high-tech looking snow boots that looked like
they derived from some era or culture of which I was unfamiliar—and he was
brimming over with irritation. Thwarted logistics were a main component of any
group activity thirty years ago, especially among people so enduringly rag-tag
as those Arthur surrounded himself with, and the scene in that extremely cold
January morning was not fundamentally different from any one of many others in
an identical mold—the sweating rearranging of passengers in A/C-less cars for a
two-load-in tubing trip, the completely avoidable but inevitable wait while one
party retrieved a loaned and then re-loaned tent, the dusty van that won’t
start until the very moment after a mutinous and hungover splinter group has left
in frustration to get coffee, etc. That morning the shuttle-like pickup that
had been dispatched to collect sledding gear from around town had been gone
entirely too long, the day was lengthening while we sat breathing vapor and
exchanging introductions in every possible permutation, and all our attempts to
intercept the truck in actu at various landlines along its route had so
far proved fruitless. Everyone kept one eye on Arthur, whose “party” it
nominally was and whose affect was visibly rising.
As I was faux-confidently mingling
through the lineup leaning on car doors and sitting on the curb, Arthur
suddenly made a beeline for me and plucked me rudely from a conversation.
“When were you born?”
“1972.”
“No, what month?”
“September?”
“Yep, let’s go.” Even before the
first question he was hustling me towards his old diesel saloon, and I’ve since
wondered about the degrees of misdirection possible in the sequence; probably
he just needed a batboy susceptible to the flattery of the spotlight.
I confirmed that I could drive and
he angled me towards the driver's side; once I was belted in and cranking on
the ignition key to absolutely no effect, Arthur started leaning on the oddly
chime-like horn, drawing everyone's attention to me in the driver's seat.
"It's from the 600! Just wait
for the salt-shaker," he commanded in an aside to me, and then screamed,
"Ocheehowie!" into the closed windows to those milling outside. I
stopped cranking, unsure what I was waiting for, and then Arthur is banging the
horn, reaching through my arms, yelling at top volume, inches from my ear,
"Ocheehowie! Let's go!" and finally rolling down the passenger window
and squirming nimbly up into a seated position on the sill with his torso up
over the roof, "Come on. If you're ready, come on. If not, meet us at
Ocheehowie and follow the fucking footsteps." And sliding back down to me
and already banging the horn, "Let's hit it," one blast per syllable.
I'm starting to mumble, "It
doesn't work," but he's already leaning into my lap and peering into some kind
of interface behind the wheel.
"You're not glowing! Wait, the
gorilla's not open. I thought you could drive?" And he eases a knob back
on the far side of the cockpit with his left hand and chimes the horn
sonorously with his right and sings like a trio doing warm-up intervals,
"Gorilla! Tubes! Ignite!" and then cranks the knob back and the
engine rumbled unsteadily up to a fast idle. "Go! Come on," and he
hits my gas knee and I start away from the curb, eager to please, almost
crushing some stray legs.
Without hesitation he spun the radio
up to an unpleasant pitch, and a pulsing groove of distortion accompanied us as
he pointed me successively out of town. "What is this?" I ventured, very
loudly but casually.
"It's a Becker!"
"Who's that?"
"Oh! No. Ghost Rider, Suicide!"
I didn't attempt anything further at
all and when we arrived after ten minutes or so he bounded out of the car and
grabbed his wooden sled, having already exhausted interest in me, and started
flagging followers into the lot. The only rule of the Polar 500, I learned, was
that you had to be able to hike your sledding apparatus in, an easy two-mile
climb. We tramped up in a loose file, some lugging large bladed rafts with
difficulty, some shouldering pool floats or sheet pans, everybody smoking or
drinking or both, no attempts to make way for descending hikers. In addition to
his formidable vessel Arthur carried some kind of feathered spear at the head
of the line, and I kept my eyes peeled for the course, expecting eventually to
find a short steep grade where we could set up base camp, settle boozily into
the warm snowmelt weather, and have some fun running the thing in heats.
The footpath had emerged out onto a
jeep trail at an unassuming wooded junction when Arthur drove his spear down
with two hands into the snow pack and gave a hoot. He pulled out two battered
driver's gloves and splayed himself down head-first onto his sled. The file still
stretched another hundred yards back down the trail, but the more intent and
sporting looking characters, mostly men, were buckling up and pocketing flasks.
The parties waiting on the truck were perhaps a mile behind, maybe not even to
the trailhead yet; it was impossible to say. I looked around for the slope and
didn't see one.
"Ocheehowie," Arthur said
with relish as he scooted back and forth on the trail with his hands, as if
warming up his triceps.
Suddenly a rangy guy in what looked
like a one-piece motorcycle suit started stomping animatedly downhill on the
fire road, whooping and missing his footing, slipping, and finally crashing
down onto his sled and attempting to pick up speed.
"Hey! Fuck you!" screamed
Arthur and began paddling and angling himself down the road with strenuous
full-body convulsions. Already by this unofficial starting gun the whole group
was starting to run, fall, and shove their way down, and I realized that there
was no slope, just the mountain to get down, a few miles of rocky jeep trail. I
saw Arthur viciously drag down a figure high-stepping past him, plastic saucer
held over head, and shout "trust your vehicle, comrade!" as the
victim's heels, tailbone, and elbows cracked simultaneously on the snow. Arthur
was veering left off the fire road and down, probably banking on some advance
knowledge of the terrain, striking out across steep and dangerous-looking
powder. People were still pouring up onto the road from the footpath, eager not
to be left behind, some cajoling or reassuring each other, or just strapping on
kneepads and cursing quietly under their breath. Upon Arthur's exit from the
road people began disappearing off the edges on all sides, taken by a kind of
frenzy, most people half-sledding and half-scrambling, breaking or abandoning
or dragging their sleds. So no slope, and no course either; I eased into my own
saucer and started skidding watchfully down the fire road. I looked back up at
the abandoned spear like a nonsensical peak-marker designating the end or the
beginning of whatever it was we were doing, the scramble of traces and
footsteps and blade-lines pouring down the snow from its organizing point.
Within five minutes I somehow found
myself entirely alone, the icy rocks having multiply cut open my palms in no
time, and a sort of panic had begun to set in, a fear that I would never make
it down at all and a childish desire that I could go home, the stinging cold
darting from my red fingertips down into my wrists. Long before I reached the
bottom I had given up attempting to race and though I was on the main jeep
trail I could only hear shouts and laughter intermittently around me in the
pines. By the time I got down, the Mercedes was gone and I felt like I had
failed somehow, somewhere along the way—but circles of people were chatting and
laughing in the parking lot, some tattered from the descent and others
evidently not having bothered to make the ascent, listening to music from the
cars and making Campari snow cones. Unabashed billows of pot smoke, and the unaffiliated
citizens with their leashed dogs making wide suspicious arcs around the formation
of poorly parked vehicles. I fell in with a group of older couples who seemed
easy going enough, who had a twelve-volt kettle going, and who were busily
sorting the options for later that night.
The realization I had that day, or
if not that day exactly then gradually as a part of my emerging relationship
with Arthur, is that he truly did not believe in a center of gravity. Take this
as a biographical or art historical thesis at your pleasure or risk. He burned
brightly himself, to be sure, and yet I never saw him fail to fling off
satellites impatiently, to spiral his way furiously from concentricity of any
kind. In learning this by Arthur’s example throughout my young adulthood I
perhaps only came to understand what any perceptive high-schooler knows about
being cool: action may only be countered with action; charisma is matched not
by adulation but charisma. If this is a law, call it the Law of Strength. For
his part, Arthur was never happier than when eluding capture. To the graspers
and the keepsakers who passed through his orbit he always encouraged the
documentary impulse—yes, comrade, of course you must bring your camera, your
audio gear, your plein air easel!—and
yet in the heat of any solid caper he refused (never explicitly, but none the
less emphatically) to pose, to accommodate, to gather his band into the arc of
the viewfinder. The commitment to the partial, the embedded, the limit of the
human-as-agent was total; if you want more, you will earn it, and you will know
that you have earned it not by vanity or acquiescence but by results. Ply your
craft, said the underside of his spiked boots rounding an icy corner and
falling out of eyeshot nearly a quarter mile below, and I’ll ply mine.
The flipside of this acentricity was
that he only ever truly loved and rewarded those who returned from a fray with
a story of their own. Those who paddled to keep up, the self-nominated bards of
the group or even of Arthur himself, they would be tolerated but not loved. The
same fierce embodiment that he cultivated in himself—the focus on the self as vector
in the human field—he naturally appreciated in others. If I make him into the prototypical
egoic solitary, the fault is my own; his was a staunch and unprejudiced
democracy, the path of collective accomplishment through the amplitude of its
member components, group-love by way of self-love, a sturdy kind of social
utopian. Although snow sports provide their own range of metaphors, to be sure,
the image that comes to me most clearly, ingrained over so many summers over
ever-shifting social and geographical permutations, is the float. Embarking
onto the river as the sun is gathering force, every floater in his or her
proper tube, five or nine or fourteen of us, everyone forged already into
subcultures by acquaintanceship and carload, floating as individuals or in
small clusters, atomic, molecular, submitted to the totalizing but locally
variable forces of current, eddy, effort, wind, and drag. The duo bravely going
down with the supply boat in the rockiest and most extremely un-fun shallow
whitewater trajectories, the sun-worshipping trio blithely spiraling into the
dead-zone eddy as the rest of the pack accelerate through the sweet spot of the
next bend, the flatterer abandoning peace, poise, and enjoyment to paddle a
hectic twenty-five minutes and regain his chosen coterie. And at dinner, drunk
on fatigue and other intoxicants, the question not the easy road of what you
witnessed, but what you did that no one witnessed.
There is a school of thought in
fiction-writing that divides authors into the systematic and the organic, those
who emplot their characters into a preordained structure and those who seed
their characters with motivations and agency and then stand by as a world unfolds.
In all the years of happenings, parties, secret meetings, blowouts, anniversaries,
parades, ceremonies, exhibitions, and rendezvous, Arthur was in life an author
of the latter kind; he may nominally have set you in motion, but you became a
character according to your own lights. This particular quality of leadership
is precisely what eludes the art historical narrative—which cannot accommodate
distributed agency except clumsily, belatedly, as a precipitate that drops out
of solution—and it was this quality as well that brought Arthur occasionally to
the brink of the pied piper or cultist. Above I briefly mentioned the
relatively well-known FootPrints Local Travel Agency, a series of quite
physical outings in which Arthur's arbitrary wielding of power in quarries or
caves or ice-fields sometimes legitimately risked putting people in harm’s way,
but the social engineering that I found and still find most difficult—and of
which, to my knowledge, no written accounts exist—was the short-lived SSS
Workshop. The Sixties Short-Story Workshop was a group (active in the early
90s) whose ostensible purpose was to provide a forum for area fiction writers
to workshop their manuscripts-in-progress but whose actual underwriting
motivation was blatantly—and riskily—to foster real interpersonal psychodrama
among the participants. Arthur had found some battered but
institutional-seeming wooden tables that he dragged into a circle in the
rough-finished living room in the house of friend whose renovation had been
interrupted by money trouble, showed up the first day in some simulacrum of
professorial tweeds, and proceeded to sit cross-legged on top of one of the
table chain-smoking while pronouncing upon (and goading others to pronounce
upon) the various pieces under review. Although never allowing what might well have
been period-appropriate patriarchal or outright bigoted behavior, the whole
thing took place under such a deeply real aegis of misanthropic arrogance that
I still think with some remorse about the relationships that were wounded or
rearticulated, the feelings hurt or enflamed, and the vocations inflected or
derailed. This was the gallery as group therapy—which of us can say, really,
whether it was finally harmful or salutary—that indeed permanently changed the
lives of those involved.
What kind of art, in the end, does
this constant sound and fury amount to? In one sense it might be seen to isolate
a lesson about process from his early Abstract Expressionism and to
dematerialize it into the more diffuse and generalized register of a
Life-/Art-World, to use my own unfortunate neologism. And yet there is a way in
which the 'process art' label fails to capture the kind of output that I found
and still find most intriguing—I think back, for example, on the “Frostbite
Doubles” T-shirts that he had printed every January (for years!), for a tennis
tournament that never took place and was never intended to. The trick was in
decoupling process from product somehow, not necessarily in order to prioritize
one but to complicate the relation. At the core of both the near-continuous
minor capers and his more traditional art practice there lay a critique of
value of some kind, or perhaps of appearance itself. For Arthur “art” never
consisted of what was there, precisely, but rather in a kind of penumbra
around the ostensible proceedings. Penumbras, halos: William James resorted to
such metaphors at times to describe what he called the “fringes” of
consciousness, metaphorical tools for reorienting the empiricist tradition away
from the manipulation of mechanistic units (whether ideal or perceptual) available
for mental shuffling like a deck of cards, and instead towards temporality, to
consciousness as a stream, towards narrative as the frame of a life.
But what force resides in this
critique and what object does it take—of what, precisely, is it a disavowal?
And in my own narrative, how to be apprentice to a disavowal—except perhaps to
write "a disavowal" where there was only silence? Within Arthur’s
force for life there lay a force for life-only, for death-in-history. So the
knight falls by the sword, his escutcheon is hefted by peer and heir, and the
title reigns continuous through the dissolution of the person. But what title,
what tradition? Of the chivalric poets it is written that the paradoxical
combination of a-centricity and cohesion that emerges around the Yvains and
Orlandos of fable comes not from some archetypal bedrock or deeper folk logic
but from the belated writer’s attempt to impose form upon recalicitrant
content, to discover meaning (create it? in-form it?) within essentially
discontinuous episodes. In this sense Arthur’s art was coextensive with a
will-to-annihilation more directly descended from Nietzsche than any
mid-century cad. Metaphysically the knight is the parent of the chronicler, then,
as well as the child—and so what of the chronicler? If I am to live it is to
narrate, at the cost of appearance; to make Arthur appear at the cost of life—the
problem, with the horizontal, is the horizon.
To stay within the horizon is the
task at hand, however, and to give justice to Arthur is to dissolve him as
cynosure, to distribute him back into the world and the people that were his
milieu. The fringe of art, Arthur's Art, is the living network, the knowable
community, the play of agents, the grand geographic interlace of friend and
enemy, the winking, alternating dilation of bower and road and temporary
studio. This is the truest reading of “The South-East Regional Artist”—that
assemblage of works that existed literally in the shadow of the Sunsphere,
figuratively upon a bursting bubble—and perhaps the truest reading of all art
in our time, the sealed letter from the inner sanctum where art-historical
propositions cease to signify: the exhibition is not the art but the trace. How
just and how right, then, that no one really witnessed it, that empty center,
and that in history it is returned to a mere trace; how rare this sparing of
our confusion. If this were eulogy and not essay I would reëmplot Arthur, not
in 1982 but 1981, among the fellow-travelers and the tales of them: who bumped
into whom in New Orleans, the knotted trails of romance, petty vendetta,
glorious weekend, diverted visit, and fateful glorious gathering. In the
clarity of hindsight I think that Arthur’s truest and most emblematic genre was
not painting but reported dialogue, the continuous ongoing codification of self
to others and others to self, the dance of identity, difference, and
development.
While I shared Arthur’s home town
and acquaintance for many years, I can in no way for these reasons boast of any
privileged knowing; Arthur was only himself when absent, spoken of, and whenever
he came back he was as new, having dipped himself into the generative waters of
non-existence-for-others. He was away from us all for long stretches of time,
many times a year, and upon each return the process of being through
being-elsewhere began again, chapters of the self having been written while in
motion. Among a cache of audio recordings I recently found a tape with one such
session; though not intrinsically any more significant than dozens or scores of
other such tales, and though delivered in my presence and so indicative of one
particular of his many personae, it can perhaps stand in for others. I am the one that presses record and the
intermittently muffled interlocutor. From the tape we can surmise that he's
recently come back from a trip, probably to southern Georgia to visit his old
friend and collaborator Dominik Bardo:
[Muffled movement of microphone] '…and
looking well-fed, as usual. Seems to be in some kind of ruddy laborer phase,
walking around with a six-pack hanging by an empty loop from his finger, you
know. But the sum of the thing is he more or less told me to fuck off. Like a
big one, existentially, the prick.'
-[Muffled response, probably “When was
this?]
'No, Christ, this was just a few
days ago, when I was down there. [Pause, muffled voice again]. Oh yes, God
knows what library he’s subscribed to now, jawing on about the material and the
immaterial, up at the bar at the 5-Star no less. Anyway, bullshit. I thought
I’d gone down to get drunk and spend a few days at the barn, having fun and hatching
schemes, but now apparently he’s been doing homework, preparing, getting an axe
ready to grind, that asshole. You know when he and Aaron were doing their Miami
Vice routine down there in that “villa-style” dungeon I didn’t come down there
ready to gleefully drop a wrench in their shit. No I hit the Jamaican clubs for
about forty-eight straight hours and got them that DJ for the opening, and if
I'm going to shoot absolutely straight with you, that DJ was the best goddamn
part of the whole trip.'
-“What happened?”
'Deric! Spelled like Eric with a
‘D,’ Christ. No, we went out to the patio to smoke and just gradually becalm
ourselves, you know. Real meditative-like. After a while, “Fuck.,” I said, just
like that. “Fuck.” As if musing. He’s quiet and then after about forty-five
seconds of total silence Dom just screws up his face like a farmer puzzling
over some kind of blight and just says, “Fuck.” As if the word had more holy
fucking pathos than he knew what to do with. Really good. So we’re just
screwing ourselves up like this for a while, not even laughing, for a long
time, probably twenty minutes, spitting and pulling long ones and saying “Fuck”
from time to time, the intervals getting longer and the whole thing just
getting funnier, cycling through whole dumb worlds of expressiveness, both of
us getting sort of method, toeing our boots into the gravel like a tornado just
destroyed the old family home, when eventually we hear these brats on the other
side of the patio getting too loud with their big ideas and at one point
they’re actually talking about “Arthur White” and his “strategies” for this
cock and bull or that. Dom suddenly gives me this simpleton look of wonder,
like he sees a big old grapefruit dawning up over the horizon, just the juciest
lemon you ever saw, and then he ambles on over to these two scabs with about
his fiftieth cigarette of the night, suddenly dropping this total set-change of
art-mob affect over his whole posture and speech and everything, and starts
asking these guys if they’re fans of White’s, ready to drum up some
appreciative camaraderie because he too, as it happens, is a fan of White’s.'
'So these two kids perk up, practically
smooth their eyebrows in the goddamn mirror like something big is going down,
the spotter from the big city about to get wowed by the local talent. So we
settle in for the moment at their table, buy everybody a round, get them going
a little bit, and before long the brats are literally quoting us hard figures,
to the dollar, of the rent at all the spaces where they’re thinking about
opening a gallery, and their friend, really good buddy, who just moved up to
New York and is fucking an honest-to-God gallery assistant, and at any rate
after a few minutes of this I’m real bored and depressed by these guys, and
tired of this level-one irony that Dom has running, and so I just suddenly,
very suddenly, just slam my hand of the table. “Hey,” I say. Just like that.
“Hey,” I yell it at them, and then doing my best portentous initiator I say,
“Don’t you little twats know anything?” “Don’t you dummies even…,” etc., etc.
“This,” I say with gusto, and I gesture dramatically at Dom, “is Arthur White,
and you are boring his fucking balls off.”
'The lads screech to a halt, moment
of confusion, and then the lid comes off. Oh yes, a gay time now, lads. After
some veiled consternation and puny embarrassment comes the too-quick turn to
much yucking and clapping indeed, all a merry band, yes, because now, though
ephebes, they are in on the rite. This, they think, this is a good story, a
myth even, and with a role for ourselves truly. At first Dom plays his cards
close, becomes the cipher, sage and sphinx-like Artist Arthur, while he
processes the heightened stakes in play, his first instinct—which I totally
love—to stiff the lads of their increasing sense that they’re in on something.
“Art is the disavowal of talk,” he finally says, getting started—pretty fucking
good—and the brats look caught between taking notes and trying to up the ante,
to take up the mantle and insert themselves into The Story somehow by fomenting
raillery, making a position for themselves. Suddenly though, before we get to
see how they handle it, and in actually a quite sinister key, truly, Dom gives
the kids a free pass and decides to side with them against me.'
'"But now a question of great
importance for you lads,” he begins, “regarding what is to be done with my
disciple here.” Gesturing towards me. Oh yes, here we go Dom, okay. Now, I
could obviously give a shit about the two brats but this is just exactly—give
me a little pour of that—here—I don’t care about these kids, fuck that, but
this is just it, this is the evil little fucking twisted root that I’m talking
about with Dom. I really don’t know what he is transparent to himself about,
but I truly believe he equates, he understands power in terms of the ability to
hurt people. He truly wants it, at some level. There is just this . . . festering
core of fear and trembling at the heart of his brother-love, and I tell you it
fucks me up. “Deconstruction is also architecture,” he told me once, not in his
folksy Marxist phase, certainly, and I actually believe that he believes it,
that what’s out there is a zero-sum universe, a universe without angels, and so
now in the ensuing gambit on the fateful evening in question this very weekend he
puts me in a bad spot on the patio at the bar, which of course means
baloney and its all laughs, but he puts “me” in a bad spot because he plays me
with his own blinking black hole at the heart of it, and with that move, amigo—for all spiritual
intents and purposes—its just me and him on the patio's quiet blackened dueling
grounds and it’s not good at all. “This mandarin,” he says, and I’m
paraphrasing, now, but with the clarity of God and fury behind me, I assure
you, “this Boy of Art—he believes that art is a thing that matters, that can
focalize ambition, that contains ideas and can have true value, and that can be
rewarded. Blasphemy!” Smiles from the boys and from the next table over. Old
Arthur in the flesh now, that asshole. “He
believes in vocation, and a band of brothers and sisters whose decisions and
whose lives have political import, and practical effects, that the eye of God
or History or Tradition is watching, and is good. Nonsense!” Mock cheers from
the good sports, I say. “Art is energy at odds with itself!” Whooping, now,
huzzah, good show, Dom. “There is no art, only people! When the hangers-on
approach, I allow them, of course, for they only act according to their low
natures. The followers, the accessories, they mystify themselves! I am
the crystal Vision that is at once its own Action, and so I ask you, again,
lads,” and the sense of crescendo at our table, and even the other occupied
tables on the patio around us, is quite thick by the point, caught uncertainly
between menace and some saving possible punchline, “What should be done with my
disciple?,” and while he glowers at me with true ferocity, one of the boys
pipes in upon the very crest of the climax, “Off with his head!” because I am
the imperious Arthur, King Arthur, and he knows enough to know that when the
cup of the monarch overfloweth one does best to channel it’s pleasure. [Pause.]
Well.'
'Then there’s a pause long enough to
be eerie as the impact of these vibrations is absorbed, found by even the
dimmest interlocutor to be in excess of the role, and so finally I said, “I’ll
tell you.”'
'And I stand up at my chair, still
at the table, as if in some kind of ritual trance, and with the rest of the bar
crowd now fully fucking tuning in, boy, I slowly take out my old and cartoonish
but—gasp—very real Bulldog and point it slowly, lifting, right at Dom’s head.'
-“What the fuck, Arthur.”
'Well. I know, I mean shit. I
honestly didn’t know just exactly what was going to happen. Something bigger
was taking over. I mean it was method, really, just another turn of the screw
we’d been winding all night. “Maybe to thrive,” I start off, “the pupil has to
destroy the master.” [Pause.] True nervousness on the patio, by that point, I
tell you.'
-“I should say so, you fucking
maniac—you could have ended up in the tank.”
'Oh it was really fucking something.
Dom couldn’t have liked it, I’m sure. The gun part at least. Though I’m sure
that no one but me saw the shiver that went through him.'
-[Pause.] "So what happened?
Jesus."
'Well, Dom stands up suddenly, all
brimming with the self-aware gravity of the hero, and reaches over to my
arm—surely not a good move, that, if we hadn’t been acting—and takes the gun
right out of my hand, and with no urgency whatsoever turned towards the bar sign
overhead, maybe twenty yards off, takes aim, and fucking blasts out a section of the neon.'
-“Holy shit. You’re fucking with
me.”
'Nope, knocked out the L and half
the blue crescent from the Bud Light sign at the 4-Star. Loud as a motherfucker
even above the cicadas.'
-“You are definitely fucking with
me.”
'It’s true, I say! God, nothing has
ever been so glorious! I could have kissed him.'
-[Pause.] “Well shit, so what
happened?”
'Well Christ, naturally it was tense
as hell, but somehow the whole thing seemed to unfold in some sort of stunned,
extra-legal register. No big men or citizen-arresters materialized from the
shadows, people just mostly averted themselves excitedly to their own clusters
of whispering about did you see that shit, and the two kids sure as hell didn’t
know what to do—we gave them eighty bucks, which certainly wasn’t enough money
[whoops with laughter], and told them to just apologize on our behalf, and we
fairly skipped out of there.'
-“Jesus Arthur.”
'Jesus is right. Here, pour me a
little. Can you even believe it? Where does inspiration like that come from?
Where? We practically linked arms and danced down the double yellow like we had
the keys to the kingdom, nipping a little from my flask here and there, getting
blurrier as we went. “Ecstasy of Avila!,” Dom kept roaring, getting drunk and stuck
on some internal groove, “My spear and tantric lover!” Like two crusty old
drunks not worth a penny, I’d say, lucky not to be arrested. But God, where
does it come from?'
-"Well I'll ask him, you
bastard, because I just got that whole thing . . .
There's some muffled movement on the
tape as one of us picks up the recorder and the thing shuts off. There are of
course other recordings, but for this document to surface now is like some
uncannily opaque limit case or uncertain parable for me, a negative of a
negative. And how many more were like it, even if not so alarming? Is one case
really different from another? The recording of this certainly tall tale is
unmarked, but must have been from around August of 1995; Arthur died in 2002, seven
years later. And how many years came before? Twenty? Forty? Of what narrative
could this ultimately meaningless episode be said to form the climax?
“Those who speak of fiction as if it
were a singular, a thing,” Arthur wrote, “do not know the delight of fiction.”
I have no recollection of the night in the recording or the story, though other
nights and other happenings from that same era loom large in memory—too many,
indeed. Surely Dominik would remember, but in what further iteration of myth or
paraphrase I couldn’t say. Truly it exists as such only because of the cassette
recorder which was ready to hand, and though this fact is not new or difficult,
still it gives me a shock these years later—the contingency, the real which
becomes the supplement, the mere furniture! And so it is: art has only ever
comprised the sentimental posing as the naïve—and I don't mean the general
temporality of belatedness, but a starker, more metaphysical condition. This is
History as a problem of appearance, and what is art if not appearance itself?
And what are ghosts if not appearance shorn of essence? But no, it is the
living speech that appeals to me. Arthur White. What is true or what is truth
is beside the point, as is the relation between fragment and whole, symptom and
emblem, and yet—I don't mean living speech only in that it can explain itself,
or that it appeals in ultimate terms to the final unbroken tradition of humane
and apprenticed judgment, but one that raises curtain after curtain, and then
yet another, with delight, with true excess, with generosity.
To conclude on a final and more personal
note: among all Arthur's many tattoos—the legible, semi-legible, and frankly
illegible traces of whims and mottos sometimes long forgotten—there was one
image that Arthur cherished, that he would show off if asked, above his knee
and slightly off-center, of an early dime anachronistically dated with his own
birth year. “I almost had it put on my arm, but thought better of it, thank the
gods.” I heard this routine more than once, a kind of private catechism that he
stinted not to share with those people he felt were kindred spirits. “And Elsie
Stevens was the model, of all people,” he’d point out to his interlocutor with real
wonder, undiminished—as with all true rituals—by repetition, “Wallace’s wife!”
His "Mercury Dime," he called it, an occultist to the last, but if he
were pressed or in a sentimental or loquacious mood, satisfied by something
especially “well done,” perhaps as the sun began to set sentimentally over some
personal exterior or interior vista, he’d come clean, with false reluctance,
about the whole story—the original commission, the ambiguity of the wingéd
Liberty, the false folk etymology, the high magic of emergence, and in the end the
unerring collective rightness of history. “The greatest design ever to
circulate in America,” he’d say, “Liberty masquerading as Hermes.”
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