I.
It's sixteen years ago this coming April that Malcolm McLaren died [1] ... and it's ten years ago this coming May that the ICA hosted an event in memoriam [2].
Essentially, the argument advanced by Young Kim and other speakers was that Malcolm was a uniquely gifted individual and that not only did he exert a seminal influence on fashion, music, and the arts during his lifetime, but that his ghost continues to haunt contemporary practice [3].
Indeed, the claim was made that McLaren is England's answer to Andy Warhol ...
II.
Today, on the occasion of what would have been his 80th birthday, I'd like to endorse the above argument, agreeing that there needs to be a fundamental reappraisal of McLaren's legacy and that the (now boring) idea that he was a mere charlatan or talentless swindler, needs to be dispelled once and for all.
For this image of him - which, admittedly, he is largely responsible for inventing [3] - obscures his significance as an artist and sells short his multidisciplinary body of work predicated on the radical manipulation of media and the staging of situations.
Having said that, the claim that McLaren was England's Warhol is, whilst bold and interesting, an imperfect analogy.
For whilst there are certain similarities and points of comparison - both postioned themselves as creative directors rather than traditional artists and both understood how art was absolutely tied to commerce and commodification - Warhol and McLaren were rooted in very different cultures and I think their aesthetic and world view was, in key respects, disparate.
I also suspect that (if pushed) McLaren himself would concede from beyond the grave that Warhol, who had left an indelible impression on him as a teenager in the early 1960s, was a far more profound artist, full of darkness.
Ultimately, whilst Malcolm hit targets no one else could hit, Warhol hit a target no one else could envision ... [5]
Notes
[1] Malcolm McLaren, born 22 January, 1946, died of peritoneal mesothelioma in a Swiss hospital on 8 April 2010, aged 64.
[2] The two-day ICA event consisted of The Legacy of Malcolm McLaren: The Clothes (20 May 2016), followed by The Legacy of Malcolm McLaren: The Art (21 May 2016).
The first was a panel discussion chaired by McLaren's long-term partner (and heir to his Estate) Young Kim, featuring writer Paul Gorman, fashion designer Kim Jones, and magazine editor Ben Reardon, and addressing Malcolm's life-long obsession with clothes and his frequent forays into fashion design. Click here for more details.
The latter was a panel discussion between ICA Executive Director Gregor Muir, Young Kim, author Michael Bracewell, and curator Andrew Wilson, followed by a screening of McLaren's 86 minute film Shallow 1-21 (2008). Click here for more details.
[3] Supporters of McLaren (like me) will point to the fact that via his conceptual boutiques operated in partnership with
Vivienne Westwood, McLaren left his sartorial signature on the fashion world
and effectively invented the visual language of
punk; that with the release of his pioneering first solo album, Duck Rock (1983), McLaren introduced hip-hop and world music
to a British audience; and that the moving-image works made at the end of his career saw a fascinating return to his
art-school roots, utilising a distinctive concept of musical paintings.
[4] Mclaren is largely responsible for his own negative reputation due to the role he adopted in The Great Rock 'n' Roll Swindle (dir.
Julien Temple, 1980). As he himself later confessed, he thought
everybody would understand it was meant to be comical and self-mocking,
but, unfortunately, people took it seriously: 'I was too good an
actor'.
[5] I'm paraphrasing Schopenhauer here who makes this distinction when discussing talent contra genius in Vol. 2, Ch. 31 of The World as Will and Representation (Cambridge University Press, 2018), pp. 393-415.
According to Schopenhauer, whilst a talented individual thinks faster and more accurately than most people; the person of genius sees a different world, although only insofar as they look more deeply into this world.

No comments:
Post a Comment