
Andy Warhol,
Rorschach, 1984
Rorschach, 1984
Rorschach, 1984
164 x 115 in.
Rorschach, 1984
Rorschach, 1984
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andy warhol:
rorschach
paintings
by Mia Fineman
Andy Warhol's Rorschach paintings, produced
in a giant spurt of activity in 1984, have
the kind of star quality that Warhol always
admired. Liquid, protean and seductively
vacant, they reflect your own desires and
fantasies right back at you. Conceived in
the spirit of superstar Nico's beguiling
promise ("I'll be your mirror"), these
pictures will be whatever you want them to
be.
The entire series of Rorschach paintings,
many of which have never been shown before,
were put on view in a massive show at both
Gagosian in Soho and up on Madison
Avenue. There are 38 paintings at the
uptown venue--upstairs are medium-sized
symmetrical black stains on bright white
backgrounds, while downstairs are smaller
works, including a wall of paintings made
with multicolored, butterfly-like blots in
gaudy tones of pink, yellow, sea-green,
violet and cobalt blue. Seven huge
canvases, each about 10 by 14 feet, fill
the lofty downtown space, including two on
the west wall composed of glitzy gold blots
that verge into the brash decorative
register of rococo wallpaper. But many of
the paintings--especially the large ones--
have a queer sort of carnal presence. Aside
from the undeniably genital imagery, the
symmetrical networks of thick, syrupy veins
of paint left behind by Warhol's pour-and-
fold technique conjure up the fleshy
physicality of lungs or kidneys.
Hermann Rorschach, the Swiss psychiatrist
who invented the eponymous test, was
himself a frustrated artist whose high
school buddies prophetically nicknamed him
Kleck, meaning "inkblot," because of his
interest in sketching. In a real Rorschach
Test, a patient is asked to describe what
he sees in ten standardized blots--some
black and gray, others with patches of
color. Trained professionals then measure
the responses against a set of established
norms, interpreting the interpretations to
unearth dark secrets about the subject's
personality, intelligence and sexual
proclivities.
Although Warhol professed ignorance about
the standardized blots of the official
Rorschach Test, he was obviously intrigued
by their serial repetitiveness and
formulaic impersonality. In his brilliant
faux-naive deadpan, he explained: "I was
trying to do these to actually read into
them and write about them, but I never
really had the time to do that. So I was
going to hire somebody to read into them,
to pretend that it was me, so that they'd
be a little more...interesting. Because all
I would see would be a dog's face or
something like a tree or a bird or a
flower. Somebody else could see a lot
more."
Warhol never actually got around to hiring
an analytical ghost-writer, but Gagosian
managed to snag critic extraordinaire
Rosalind Krauss to say something
interesting about the paintings. In her
rather highbrow catalogue essay, Krauss
reads the Rorschach series as a "parodic
vision of Color Field abstraction," as a
sassy corruption of the "stain painting"
practiced by Helen Frankenthaler and Morris
Louis, Kenneth Noland and Jules Olitski. If
the Color Field painters wanted to
transcend the carnal messiness of Abstract
Expressionism, to move painting into the
disembodied realm of pure opticality, as
Krauss says, then Warhol "pulled the plug"
on these sublime aspirations by reminding
us that there's no form so innocently
abstract that it can't be turned back into
literary content--like a tree or a bird or
a flower.
And it's true--these are abstract paintings
without the heavy air of cryptic obscurity
and vague profundity that hangs around a
lot of abstract art. There's a democratic,
do-it-yourself quality to the Rorschach
paintings: you can read whatever you want
into them, there are no wrong answers. Go
see the show when you're a little tired,
when you're defenses are down, when you
need to sort out and discard some of the
odd junk lying around between your ears.
That's what I did, and this is what I saw:
a blooming iris; a solar plexus; a sinister
jack-in-the-box; Jimmy Durante's nose; a
couple of flamenco dancers in a bowl of
Cheerios; a schematic portrait of Groucho
Marx; a pouncing black cat; the Lone Ranger
with a bad skin disease; a grimacing
clown's face; a startled elephant; twin
fetuses with coiled tails; a grizzly bear
with his head lodged in a guillotine; a
mutant Mickey Mouse licking his own tail;
two facing seahorses kissing a penis; a
vampire bat swooping down over a headless
male nude; a giant insect crawling up a
wall and extruding a rooster-shaped turd;
an atom bomb exploding over the man in the
moon.
Any further analysis is best left to
trained professionals.
MIA FINEMAN is a New York writer.
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