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163<br />

Although Boris rarely leaves his apartment, he is quite well informed. He is<br />

very knowledgeable about the New York gallery scene, which has shown little<br />

if any interest in him. When I tell him about the Mark Rothko exhibition A<br />

Painter’s Progress, <strong>The</strong> Year 1949 at the Pace Wildenstein Gallery in Midtown,<br />

which made a deep impression on me, he responds with anecdotes about<br />

gallerists’ business methods. Color Field painting is not his thing. I think the<br />

idea that Abstract Expressionism, with its implicit ban on the figurative,<br />

might have been intended as a response to the horrors <strong>of</strong> the war and <strong>of</strong><br />

the present was completely alien to Lurie.<br />

“Back then, the art scene was only interested in aesthetics and not<br />

political subjects. We were too subjective and too political, as well.” 04<br />

In one episode <strong>of</strong> the television series Mad Men, the employees <strong>of</strong> the Sterling<br />

Cooper advertising agency sneak into their boss’s <strong>of</strong>fice to look at the<br />

artwork he has just acquired. <strong>The</strong>y discuss whether the red bands <strong>of</strong> color<br />

mean anything, and, if so, what. In view <strong>of</strong> the increase in value, with his decision<br />

to buy a Mark Rothko painting Bert Cooper is completely correct, but<br />

truly up-to-date he was not. In 1962, the year in which the episode is set,<br />

Abstract Expressionism’s heyday was already over. I am amused by the idea<br />

that Cooper might also have chosen Lurie’s Lolita | see image p. 21.<br />

With their practice <strong>of</strong> Social Realism, the artists <strong>of</strong> the March Group—Sam<br />

Goodman, Stanley Fisher, and Boris Lurie—pushed the re-objectification <strong>of</strong><br />

art and therefore acted unintentionally, but also unnoticed, as a link between<br />

Abstract Expressionism and Pop art, whose good-natured optimism<br />

they rejected as being too affirmative.<br />

04<br />

BORIS LURIE<br />

in: SHOAH and PIN-<br />

UPS—<strong>The</strong> NO!-<strong>Art</strong>ist<br />

Boris Lurie, a documentary<br />

by Reinhild<br />

Dettmer-Finke in<br />

collaboration with<br />

Matthias Reichelt<br />

(Germany 2006), time<br />

code 00:47:38.<br />

05<br />

Ibid., time code<br />

00:50:55.<br />

“We were competitors <strong>of</strong> Pop art. And Pop art was a powerful organization.<br />

American, chauvinist. <strong>The</strong> Pop artists actually thought America<br />

was really great, and a can <strong>of</strong> soup is wonderful, and a supermarket is<br />

wonderful. We took a critical attitude. That was the opposite.” 05<br />

But it was particularly their excitement about the present time that prompted<br />

the Pop artists to also be cutting edge with respect to formal aesthetics,<br />

hence making their NO!art colleagues’ recourse to the collage and assemblage<br />

techniques <strong>of</strong> the interwar period seem somewhat traditional.<br />

“I call it, <strong>of</strong> course we attempted to do something new . . . . Let’s say<br />

it’s a combination <strong>of</strong> extreme self-expressionism and social political<br />

ideas with an influence <strong>of</strong> DADA also. But it was mainly Expressionist.”<br />

06<br />

06<br />

BORIS LURIE<br />

in: Estera Milman,<br />

NO!art and the Aesthetics<br />

<strong>of</strong> Doom. Boris<br />

Lurie, Estera Milman,<br />

One-on-One, part II<br />

(New York 2000/11),<br />

time code 00:16:14.<br />

A Failed Portrait

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