Friday, May 04, 2007
Gerhard Richter
On Oct. 24, 1990, Richter made the following entry in his journal, available from the MIT Press, titled The Daily Practice of Painting. "The much-maligned 'art scene' of the present day," he wrote, "is perfectly harmless and even pleasant, if you don't judge it in terms of false expectations. It has nothing to do with those traditional values that we hold high (or that hold us high). It has virtually nothing whatever to do with art. That's why the 'art scene' is neither base, cynical, nor mindless: it is a scene of brief blossoming and busy growth, just one variation on the never-ending round of social game-playing that satisfies our need for communication, alongside such others as sport, fashion, stamp-collecting and cat-breeding. Art takes shape in spite of it all, rarely and always unexpectedly; art is never feasible."