fathers and mothers of pop

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a 1990 review by John A Walker about an exhibition on the British Independent Group

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FATHERS [AND MOTHERS] OF POP

A review of the exhibition The Independent Group: Post-War Britain and the Aesthetics of Plenty, ICA, London, February-April 1990.

Poster for This is Tomorrow (1956) exhibition with collage by Richard Hamilton.

----------------------------------------------------------------------------JOHN A. WALKER (COPYRIGHT 2009)Britain in the early 1950s was still suffering from the adverse effects of the Second World War and adjusting to the loss of empire. Atomic bombs and the Korean

War added to the gloom which national celebrations like the Festival of Britain and the Coronation could only temporarily alleviate. The affluent consumer society with its pop and teenage cultures that flowered in the late 1950s and 1960s was still at an embryonic stage. While some Britishers looked enviously across the Atlantic to the United States, where, according to the movies and adverts, there was a paradise of material comfort, others resented the impact of admass upon the nation. It was at this historical juncture that various younger members of the ICA, Dover Street, London, organised an informal discussion group first named the Young Group and then the Independent Group (IG). It met intermittently between 1952 and 1955. At the time, the participants had no inkling that their small gatherings would later become famous or that they would be dubbed Fathers of Pop.

Think - tank extraordinaire The word independent signified a degree of autonomy from the mother institution and in particular marked a break with the aesthetic preferences of members of the old guard such as Herbert Read and Roland Penrose, founders of the ICA, whose tastes had been formed in the 1930s. Surrealism was crucial to Penrose, while Read was receptive to most varieties of modern art. Both believed the arts formed the apex of a pyramid, at the bottom of which was the mass media; both considered artistic values to be eternal and absolute. The IG also opposed, or were indifferent to, the several strands of British art of the time, namely, Moore-ish yokelry, neoromanticism and kitchen sink realism. They preferred the Dadaists and Futurists,

Francis Bacon, Jackson Pollock and European neo-Brutalism.

Four members of the IG: Peter Smithson, Paolozzi, Alison Smithson, Henderson. Photo Nigel Henderson, 1956. Courtesy of the Mayor Gallery. ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------Participants in IG meetings and projects included Lawrence Alloway, Reyner Banham, Magda and Frank Cordell, Theo Crosby, Toni del Renzio, Richard and Terry Hamilton, Nigel Henderson, Geoffrey Holroyd, John McHale, Eduardo Paolozzi, Colin St John Wilson, Alison and Peter Smithson, James Stirling, William Turnbull and John Voelcker. Thus the IG encompassed art and design critics, architects, artists and people working in popular culture (Frank Cordell in pop music and del Renzio in women's fashion magazines). As the list of names reveals,

the IG was very much a male-dominated institution and the contributions of its female participants have yet to be properly evaluated.

Art critic Lawrence Alloway in 1961. ---------------------------------------------------------------------

Reyner Banham --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

In effect, the IG was a cultural research centre, a think-tank extraordinaire. Its ambitious aim was to consider the implications for art and society of new developments in science, technology, industrial design and the mass media at the mid~point of the twentieth century. A wide range of topics were examined: the machine aesthetic, the architecture of Le Corbusier, action painting, car styling, cybernetics, crystallography, helicopter design, philosophy, science fiction, Western movies, fashion, pop music, and communication theory.

Picasso and Presley Images from US mass circulation magazines, advertising and the cinema were viewed and the term pop art was introduced to refer to contemporary popular or mass culture. (It was only later, after the IG had ceased to meet, that Hamilton and Paolozzi began to make pop art from the raw material of popular culture.) Curiously the biggest, most popular media event in Britain in the early 1950s - the televising of the Coronation of Queen Elizabeth II - seems to have been ignored by the IG intellectuals. What was exhilerating about the IG was its orientation to the present and the future, its openness to new experience, its acceptance of change, its intellectual curiosity, its serious treatment of commercial entertainment, its interdisciplinary programme, its anthropological, non-hierarchical view of culture (distinctions between high and low, good and bad were suspended; there was to be a fine art/pop culture continuum; Picasso and Presley were different but, in their respective spheres, equal), its acceptance of an aesthetic of expendability and currency rather than an aesthetic of permanence, its rejection of absolutes in

favour of relativistic, historical assessments. Its members recognised, and wished to point out to others, the astonishing heterogeneity of humanity's material culture and the multiplicity of media which confronted people in the mid-twentieth century. This implied the development of a sensibility that was eclectic, catholic, flexible and pragmatic. The IG seems to have been describing the pluralism of the 1980s and so it is no wonder that its participants are now considered among the first post-modernists. In the beginning IG meetings were exclusive (by invitation only); later they became public and a wider audience was reached via exhibitions which combined pleasure with instruction. IG participants were involved in mounting shows at several London venues in the 1950s: Parallel of Life and Art (ICA, 1953); Man, Machine and Motion (ICA, 1955); This is Tomorrow (Whitechapel, 1956); House of the Future (Ideal Home Exhibition, Olympia, 1956). This is Tomorrow - a collaboration between artists and architects which consisted of twelve teams co-ordinated by Theo Crosby - is chiefly remembered for the popular imagery/perception display designed by Hamilton, McHale and Voelcker, but it also featured a mixed-media installation by Paolozzi, Henderson and the Smithsons which was a symbolic dwelling, a primitivistic patio and pavilion based on working-class backyards and sheds in Bethnal Green, which alluded to people's culture of a different, more vernacular kind.

Magazine feature about House of the Future designed by the Smithsons. ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------Creative friction

Design played an important role within the IG and its aftermath, especially in the case of Banham, Hamilton and the Smithsons. It was both a subject to be analysed and a practice to be engaged in: modern architecture, industrial design and advertising were scrutinised and exhibitions, posters, catalogues and houses of the future designed. Banham's and Hamilton's essays of the late 1950s - A Throwaway Aesthetic, Hommage a Chrysler Corp, Persuading Image - were design journalism of a high order; they paralleled the work of Roland Barthes in France and the semiotic studies of communications undertaken at Ulm in Germany. In terms of exhibition design, the IG's ideas were influenced by Alexander Dorner, a radical German museum director of the 1920s and 1930s whose book, The Way Beyond Art, appeared in 1947. Their aim was to create environments that would stimulate participation. However, a montage of images and a mix of media were used to produce not an integrated Gesamtkunstwerk, but a multifaceted, intertextual display. As Alloway later put it: The maze form made it possible to create a nonhierarchic profusion of images from all sources. A complex history of critical reception ensued once the IG ceased to function. During the 1960s, the group was written up by Alloway as the prelude to British pop art, a view re-iterated by Banham and others in the 1979 Arts Council film Fathers of Pop. In the 1980s the design historians Penny Sparke and Anne Massey undertook detailed research work in order to criticise this over-simplistic conception, puncturing several of the myths that had grown up around the group and arguing that it owed much to the ICA, its host institution, and that a prime concern was not so much mass culture as European modernism. Certainly the

sculptures and paintings Paolozzi and Hamilton made between 1952 and 1955 were indebted more to the modern art of Paris than to pop culture, though Paolozzi was obsessed with the man/machine interface and with his Krazy Kat archive. And people like Banham and Hamilton were similarly steeped in the modern movement, though they believed that technology and business had changed, hence it was vital to challenge modernism's values and assumptions. It does seem to be the case that the IG's significance remains fluid and contentious because the range and complexity of its activities make possible a variety of interpretations. While the project involved intensive collaboration and teamwork, the IG was nevertheless composed of diverse individuals with varying enthusiasms whose activities were marked, as curator James Lingwood puts it, by creative friction; even their collaborations were characterised by Hamilton as antagonistic. After 1956 their careers evolved in many directions, but virtually all continued to elaborate issues broached at IG meetings and exhibitions. The ICA's decision to illustrate the work of key figures as individuals is to be welcomed because it highlights the issues of difference and divergence within the group. The present ICA show is a meta-exhibit: an exhibition about exhibitions. It is also incestuous: the ICA celebrates its own past. In these circumstances critical objectivity may be at a premium and the recreation of past shows could be viewed as an exercise in nostalgia at odds with the forward momentum of the IG itself. IG exhibitions were temporary phenomena, showing the transience of pop culture itself. In photographs they achieve a permanence that contradicts their short-term nature. Furthermore, the current show poses a historical comparison - the 1950s

versus the 1990s - whereby those artists of today who struggle with questions of art and mass culture, commerce and complicity, can draw lessons from the British experience of the 19505. The danger is that a reading of the IG emphasising the art/mass culture dimension will result in a partial understanding of the group's concerns.

Agent of big business What impelled the I G to engage in their analysis of mass culture and design? Obviously, enjoyment: analysis results in a deeper involvement with the object of study. Obviously, a desire to comprehend the new, post-war world in which they found themselves. But there were also instrumental reasons. Banham, for instance, conceived of the design critic as the partner of the designer helping industry to decide what will sell. In 1955 he wrote: The critic ... must have the ability to sell the public to the manufacturer ... he must project the future dreams and desires of people as one who speaks from within their ranks. It is only thus that he can participate in the extraordinary adventure of mass production ... Is Banham's design critic, one wonders, a spokesman for the people or a gullible, unpaid agent of big business? Certain members of the IG - Hamilton, for example - saw themselves as the prototypes for a new kind of knowing consumer. To consume goods and services, to welcome a rapid turnover of goods and styles, and to demand new, ever more sophisticated products was a social duty because it was in this way that production could be expanded, a society of abundance created, and living

standards continually raised. The fine artist/intellectual, in Hamilton's case both an analyst and maker of culture, had to find a way to become socially relevant again; ultimately, his efforts were motivated by a desire to serve the needs of society. But this generalised expression obscured vital distinctions: what needs, whose needs? Are the needs of women and men, workers and bosses, black and white, rich and poor all the same? Class and politics Class and politics were vexed, unresolved questions for the IG. The idea that their project represented the revenge of elementary school boys was only partly true because some participants came from upper- and middle-class backgrounds. Most were upwardly mobile in the sense that they benefited from university or art school educations. They cut across social divisions by appreciating both high art and mass culture. Yet their affirmation of pop culture and consumerism aligned them with the majority to whom high art was a closed book. They themselves realised there was a contradiction between their admiration for US industrial design, movies, and so on, and their political objections to the capitalist system responsible for their existence. (Some of the IG were socialists and voted Labour.) This contradiction still exists on the Left in Britain: witness the problems the Labour movement has had in coming to terms with the market and consumerism, and indeed with the image, packaging and advertising of the Labour Party itself. The IG's optimism about the future was based on faith in technological progress and in the growing power of consumers; its participants' analysis of the iconography and styling of mass culture artefacts was brilliant, but the principal

weakness of the project was the failure to address the side of production, economics and the ownership of cultural industries, the long-term negative effects of industrialisation and the commodification of everything. One has only to think of the ecological consequences of the expendable aesthetic vaunted by the IG to realise the naivety of some of their thinking. They were mesmerised by the promises of industry and the ecstasy of mass communications. When the Leftists among the IG met at the ICA they seem to have left their scepticism and politics at home. ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------David Robbins (ed), The Independent Group: Postwar Britain and the Aesthetics of Plenty, (Cambridge, MA: The MIT Press, 1990). Book/Catalogue. Update, see: Anne Massey, The Independent Group: Modernism and Mass Culture in Britain 1945-59, (Manchester: Manchester University Press, 1995). Nigel Whiteley, Reyner Banham: Historian of the Immediate Future, (Cambridge, MA: The MIT Press, 2002). http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Reyner_Banham http://www.thisistomorrow2.com/ http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/This_Is_Tomorrow http://www.independentgroup.org.uk http://killerbeesting.blogspot.com/2008/03/magda-cordell-mchale.html http://www.warholstars.org/articles/johnmchale/johnmchale.html http://www.warholstars.org/articles/richardhamilton/richardhamilton.html http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Toni_del_Renzio

http://www.newleftreview.org/?view=2434 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------This review was first published in the design magazine Blueprint, no 64, Feb 1990, pp. 24-26. John A. Walker is a painter and art historian. In the late 1950s he was an art student taught by Hamilton. He is the author of many books and articles on contemporary art and mass media. He is also an editorial advisor for the website: "http://www.artdesigncafe.com">www.artdesigncafe.com