LOVE IS HELL - Sam Havadtoy website
Transcription
LOVE IS HELL - Sam Havadtoy website
SAM HAVADTOY LOVE IS HELL 2 An artist is born. I am touched by the magnificence of his work. He has dipped into the old Hungarian spirit and culture and created a work that is very now. It is very Hungarian, very yoko ono Sam Havadtoy and it’s beautiful. 3 4 5 6 7 Everything is about love, and love is hell. Love is hell because love is forever, love is eternal. SAM HAVADTOY 8 It’s strange that I should be using words to present the conceptual paintings of Sam Havadtoy to you for reasons that will become apparent as you slowly uncover his work. You may not know by looking, but each one of Sam’s paintings has a story behind it—quite literally. So to introduce you to Sam’s converse, cathartic works (which in a sense are nothing more than wrestling matches with his own brain), let’s start at the conception point of every artist’s first impulsive need to be creative: the realization that if they don’t start to make things, they’ll go nuts! It goes without saying that art is nothing more than therapy for those who can’t hack the couch. Sam’s works are birthed from his running. They come screaming from his therapist’s recommendation that he write down important memories from his life on paper to act as a kind of cranial balm. Since higher minds often stumble into entirely new aesthetic visions while avoiding the analyst’s office, Sam’s aversion therapy, naturally, was instead to turn the suggested exercise into a body of work. And presto change-o! An original thinker once again dodges a lifetime of once-a-weeks at the psychotherapist’s lair and, in its place, an artist’s new vision is born unto the world. Hey, don’t knock the process! How do you think human evolution got this far? Each of Sam’s paintings starts with a raw canvas onto which a specific memory from his life is then written. If there isn’t room for the whole story, Sam just begins writing at the top again, obliterating the words he already wrote at the beginning. Readability by others is not the point. The exiling ritual of translating past memories from amorphous brain waves into words which convey an approximation of an event—bringing the past up to the present, where it can be symbolically tended with in the tangible realm—is what’s important to Sam. When adequately scribed, the words and all they represent are then forever entombed under a hearty layer of paint. Words: gone. Emotional attachment: frozen. The canvas is then wrapped in a layer of lace and more paint until it hardens into a scabrous, protective shell. Groupings of shapes or subtle washes of colors are then added over the surface, often mirroring the lace’s patterns. And, as a final adornment, many of the works also have brief words or phrases bluntly exclaimed across the front in large Helvetica type. Obscuring the written word has been practiced by civilizations since recorded history. The ancient Egyptians kept hieroglyphics on the walls of sealed tombs hidden from mortal eyes at all costs for no other reason than in an attempt to establish a direct line with their almighty Gods. Extremist religious groups who burned books in giant bonfires to save people’s souls? Similar concept, different God. What about those giant blocks of black ink the C.I.A. uses to censor parts of top-secret documents? Same thing…very different God! I find it appropriate that Sam uses something as hushed and gentle as lace for one of the sentinel layers, a bandage guarding his mummified memories. When I asked him why, Sam told me that he is simply very fond of it. It’s actually fitting, seeing as one of the acknowledged origins of lace comes from ancient Greek and Roman garment makers, who conceived the practice fixing the frayed edges of worn garments—twisting, tying and stitching up the hanging threads into decorative patterns, the tidying up of loose ends into things of beauty. Although on the surface, I don’t think exorcising demons or imprisoning secrets is Sam’s goal. To try to halt them is to offer a sacrificial appeasement to them, before banishing them back to where they originated…the abyss. Covering things up is a way of helping one feel in control of their perceived powers. The minimally chosen words imprinted boldly across the front of Sam’s paintings? Mere epitaphs. “Love Is Hell“ might as well read, “Here lies the beloved body of what led me to believe Love Is Hell.“ I’d love to look at Sam Havadtoy’s paintings in the traditional sense, but the fact that he’s playing passive aggressive peek-a-boo with the hidden moments of his life acts as a strange 9 10 attraction to my own uncensored, internally voyeuristic mind. In public, viewers of Sam’s work may wonder aloud, voicing polite theories about the stories locked behind each one. But their subconscious will undoubtedly be plunging deep into primordial depths and therein lays these works’ magnetic yank. The endoderm of Sam’s paintings acts as a lightening rod to our own secret curiosity. These works are subtle trick mirrors offering kaleidoscopic refractions of what is hiding beneath our own hairy scalps. They force us to contemplate which memories from our own lives we might like to keep permanently imprisoned from public view…or even ourselves. It’s like two-way suspicion that leads to a speculative implosion. Are these paintings simply Surrealist? If the original Surrealist movement’s goal was to tap into the viewer's subconscious, then Sam may have simply found a more direct route. Sam told me that he will never reveal the stories buried beneath his works. One buyer demanded to know the story written under the work he had just purchased. Sam gently told him to trust his vibes: if he felt a good emotional connection to the work, it was obviously a happy story; if it was a negative one, then perhaps the reverse was true. Such is the arena of truly conceptual painting. Let the (mind) games begin! If you’re the kind of person who is blind to all but the first three letters in the descriptive phrase “conceptual art,“ rage not! Your suspicion is healthy—nothing more than a latent instinct to explore, which Sam’s paintings will no doubt encourage. But since my need to excavate is more pronounced, I’ll confess I have inspected Sam’s paintings carefully in my hands, turning them every which way, squinting my eyes along the sides…peering at the back as I hold them up to the light. Their surprising thickness, despite their light weight, makes them seem almost like food (bon-bons of Id smothered in a layer of the Superego?) or even giant pills. One almost expects to turn them over and see the logo “Pfizer“ embedded on the back—anxiety medications for the Gods perhaps. I must confess that I could find no evidence of the naked confessions written underneath. It looks like the only way to read them is via an x-ray. But of course, while we’re at it, we might as well just plop Sam inside a C.A.T. scan machine and gawk at his squishy insides…or perhaps extract his DNA. I’m willing to bet that thought makes Sam a bit nervous, as naturally it might. The act of reversing his insides onto the outside is a concept that probably runs against his Transylvanian roots. Hungary, as a nation, has been through marauding Magyars sweeping across the plains; endless wars; pulling-aparts and putting-back-together-agains; a dual monarchy; German occupation; and then eventual “freedom“ from all that. Hungary’s erratic history line is one that has led its people to being categorized, psychologically, as one of the most insular populations in the world. Sam feels that the almost universal American need to share innermost secrets for the outermost spotlight, as on TV’s “The Jerry Springer Show,“ is luridly fascinating—almost horrifying. Surprising? “Hungary had the highest rate of suicide anywhere in the world until very recently,“ Sam remarked. The facts are that, from roughly 1900 to 1997, Hungary DID have the highest suicide rate in the world. As of this writing, the number one slot has been snatched by Lithuania. Hungary has slid rapidly to number eight, a fact that Sam attributes to all the prescribed medications floating around in people’s bloodstreams these days. I consider myself an optimist, a Hungarian optimist. SAM HAVADTOY Did you know that one of Hungary’s most renowned exports is the song “Gloomy Sunday?“ Composed by Rezsô Seress in 1933, it has become known over time as “The Hungarian Suicide Song“ and has developed a (slightly urban) legend as having the ability to actually induce suicidal feelings (or acts) in listeners. Artists as diverse as Ray Charles, Billie Holiday, Serge Gainsbourg, Diamanda Galas and Lydia Lunch have all recorded versions…each trying to plug into its ineffably fatalistic croon. The song’s energy and legacy seem to channel and encapsulate what many, including Sam, believe is one of Hungary’s defining contributions to the world of expression. 11 “In Hungary, many people have no choice but to become an artist or poet,“ Sam has confessed to me. Oh, by the way…did I mention composer Rezsô Seress jumped to his death in 1968 for reasons that aren’t exactly clear? Sam has told me that, much like himself, “Seress was a true Hungarian optimist.“ Sam…whatever you do, PLEASE DON’T STOP MAKING PAINTINGS! 12 But before you assume that Sam’s strange, quiet process is mocking television shows like “Oprah“ and drugs like Paxil® and Effexor® (things that we, as Americans, consider brazen badges of honor), first examine his take on Western pop culture (or the inadvertent history of it) in another body of work. The individual works in Sam’s “Icons“ series look, from a distance, like uprooted slabs of concrete from the stars along Hollywood’s “Walk of Fame.” Styled after 18th Century religious icons, they pay homage instead to rock and roll immortals that became all-powerful in the Eastern Bloc of the 1960s despite the mid-20th Century Communist desire to suppress their influence. The template for each star cut-out in the center was taken from an old “Five Year Plan“ sign that Sam found outside of a factory. The inside of each piece is gold leaf, which Sam polishes meticulously and obsessively by hand. Two of Sam’s influences are Russian-born portraitist Alexej von Jawlensky and Italian still-life painter Giorgio Morandi. Both generally preferred small canvases and the meditative ritual of repetition on one theme was more or less central to their work. Sam likes the compact nature of his works. He believes a small painting can be a large picture and that a large painting is often a very small picture. He claims that if no one finds an emotional connection to his works, physically they can be filed away easily. This is in sharp contrast to some of the mammoth gargantuosities by late 20th Century “masters“ that currently hoard prime real estate in some of the world’s finer museum storage facilities. What’s that Sam? You say you DON’T want your emotional catharsis to be hogging the spotlight front and center at all times? OK Sam, you’ve proven it: an American you certainly ARE NOT! Is Sam a nihilist? Anyone who wonders if two similar snowflakes can find a connection or who concocts a bazillion shades of pink to capture the color of Cherry Hill in Central Park must be a believer on some level. But the modern skeptic is indeed embedded in him. When he told me of two neon signs he planned to install in an upcoming gallery show in Budapest, one above the entrance to read “Only want your money“ and one above the exit to read “Only want your body,“ I asked him if this was a comment on the political climate of the city itself. “Imagine them in the entrance and exit of a church“ was his pithy reply. I’m convinced Sam Havadtoy will continue to make painting after painting, as he proceeds through the obstacle course of a life lived. Each work will lay to rest a memory or pay tribute to one. Each painting will be different, but each will resemble another enough to be like individual leaves on a tree. If you choose to excavate your own past through Sam’s conceptual paintings, please do so…and enjoy the trip! But if you just want to look, feel free to adorn the walls of your life with Sam’s homages to the traversed hallways of his own. They are perfect luminous confections, brilliant swatches of sweetness and light, and are capable of brightening any room— perhaps on some Gloomy Sunday. Mark Allen 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 So he demanded of me, “Look into my eyes and count to three…one, two, three…and then tell me what you see.” I did as he asked and answered, “Wrinkles.” 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 The Properties of Lace “Unhappiness is immoral,” said D.G. Rosetti, right before he was committed to an institution. 46 When I say “love is hell” you hear, “love is immortal.” Either way it shunts us both into deeper opposites of bliss. Embrace the tiny knives, nobody ever bled to death from paper cuts The slow, operatic failure of something essential, a solid connection disintegrating like the curtains in an abandoned farmhouse shielding empty rooms from the penetrating light anything left out in the weather will finally fall apart Erase the marks inflicted on the hide of the past. Despair is a cold thing cold as the stars in January. Inhale the melancholy like a cleansing rain polishing every leaf in the garden to a fine green glow fresh air touching your face 47 Afternoon light slants lower the sun heads down into deep freeze and darkness turn the lamps up high bank the fires only the work you do will save you from yourself 48 sharp knock of winter in morning breeze summer a distant memory, the void gaping, the battered heart’s battery running down. This is where you walked in This is where you left Round and round the Oktogon in this spectral Eastern twilight. This city might have been romantic in wartime or when Red Army tanks rolled down Andrassy Street Reality a dreary square of sky seen through a rainsoaked window bleak skies to match the curdled mood the self regarding itch you cannot scratch, heart closed like a fist. Harry Houdini stares from a stamp As if he knew something The letter never gets mailed the words remain unspoken all pity and no muscle. Do something with this dolor drooling on the lapels of your evening suit, the silk facings charred like fish in a burning barrel no-one settling in beside you on the long ride across the night to Tokyo Tud segiteni? Cut the slack from the rope and the boat floats away along the Danube blue heart blue boat blue river Back then you thought you understood the beauty of small things bread and flowers, white wine cool as her lips Dreaming of maps, Atlas mountains running down to the sea at Agadir, embroidered mouthpiece of the burkha concealing so much beauty. Beneath the veil the heart beats, blood flows. Sodden weight of sweat damp sheets alone in the vastness of the bed drowning in Egyptian cotton and goose down, 49 blankets like coils around your body, entombed like a pharaoh. Four in the morning is when the doom devils tear aside the veil, dance in tiny hobnailed boots around your unprotected head and everything seems more sharply lost 50 ‘you have been replaced’ Words scribbled on canvas retain their secret power even buried under layers of oil and lace. The cured paint cures everything. Max Blagg 51 52 53 54 55 56 57 All works are mixed media on canvas, 50.5 X 50.5 cm. 58 59 These works are about people who made me realize that Love is Hell and dedicated to those who made me understand that Love is Forever. Special thanks to Eileen Boxer for making her talent available to me at all times, never getting tired of my problems—big or small—and Adam Boxer for being so supportive of my project—stepping in and helping whenever it was necessary. Together, they made this catalogue a reality. 60 Design: Eileen Boxer, BoxerDesign Photography: Gabor Benedek, Arttypo Studio Printing: Timp, Budapest Printed and bound in Hungary All works © Sam Havadtoy, 2005. Texts © Yoko Ono, 2004; Mark Allen, 2005; and Max Blagg, 2005. This catalogue was published by Galeria 56, Budapest. www.galeria56.hu