Artist-Musicians, Musician-Artists
4 Versatile artist personalities
From the 1970s onward, art schools were the point of origin for interdisciplinary and multidisciplinary work. For students they were not so much a desired goal as the lesser evil in third-level educational environment in that they provided enough freedom to be able to develop one’s own ideas. Trends in music such as punk and new wave motivated numerous art students to make music themselves. Art schools were not only the ideal place to perform; the audiences were also more open than elsewhere to unusual musical ideas, crazy outfits, and spectacular performances. The importance of art schools as breeding grounds for noteworthy pop music around 1980 can be seen in the following illustrious lineup of former art students: Tina Weymouth (Talking Heads), Glen Matlock (Sex Pistols), Joe Strummer (The Clash), Marc Almond (Soft Cell), and PJ Harvey all became famous through their music.[11]
Malcolm McLaren, who studied at a variety of different art academies — such as Goldsmith’s College — before going down in the history of pop music as the founder of punk esthetics, played a special role in Britain.
With the aim of provoking and breaking taboos, he not only made the term ‘punk’ popular in England together with the band he managed — the Sex Pistols — but also established punk as a hybrid and alienating style using situationist strategies and in close collaboration with the artist Jamie Reid and with Vivienne Westwood (with whom he ran a boutique, initially called Let it Rock and from 1974 named Sex). In later years, he summarized his ambitions as follows: It was about creating a glorious adventure from non-existent talent and unprofessionalism. Most of my ideas and art products are simply the result of my attitude to life. And are intended to cause unrest.[12]
In the case of the musical genres mentioned here, more importance was placed on the energy of the acoustic expression and the authenticity of the presentation than on musical virtuosity and perfectionism. It was not necessary to provide proof of professional training; on the contrary, at the beginning of the 1980s, an intentional dilettantism was extremely popular both in pop music and in the visual arts.
For a whole series of artist-musicians/musician-artists, the principle that a good punk song only needed three chords applied just as much as the do-it-yourself attitude. The Geniale Dilletanten (Dilettante Geniuses), who took an interdisciplinary approach, were among the bands that emerged from this context. Their work was presented above all at the Festival genialer Dilletanten (Festival of Dilettante Geniuses) held on September 4, 1981, at the Tempodrom venue in Berlin (featuring, among others, Einstürzende Neubauten, Frieder Butzmann, and Christiane F.) and in a book published by Wolfgang Müller in 1982. In the introductory text, Müller explains that he understands genius as an intensity in dealing with the material.[13] Musically speaking, this meant in those days above all that: Anyone can make noise, for that you don’t need digital recording equipment or a 36-track studio with thousands of sophisticated elements.[14] The group founded by Wolfgang Müller, Die Tödliche Doris, was accordingly versatile, releasing records, producing art works, holding performances, and making videos such as the legendary Naturkatastrophenballett (Ballet of Natural Disasters; 1983).
Such a free of approach to the disciplines is characteristic of the 1980s, in which numerous artists did not confine themselves to one form of expression but were filmmakers, painters, performance artists, architects, musicians, authors, critics, and theorists all at the same time, operating in equal measure in various fields, with Warhol as an important point of reference.
The point was not to link different arts with one another but to find an appropriate means of expression for a particular idea, to test concepts in another field, or simply to extend one’s own radius of effect.
Laurie Anderson, for example, had a career both as an artist (as a performance artist she participated in documenta 7, 1982, and documenta 8, 1987) and as a musician (her song O Superman reached no. 2 in the British charts in 1981). In her oeuvre she combines Fluxus tradition with new wave. Her interest in multimedia manifests itself in opulent performances such as the eight-hour opera United States I-IV (1983). Talking Heads member David Byrne, on the other hand, has worked successfully as a director, photographer, and visual artist.
Kim Gordon from Sonic Youth, in addition to her musical career and occasional activities as a music producer, continued to work as a fine artist and curator and acted at the beginning of the 1980s as an art critic for Artforum. Her musical career began when she was invited by Dan Graham to collaborate in a performance with a girl’s band. Graham, who himself never confined himself to one profession but worked simultaneously as a visual artist, critic, cultural theorist, photographer, architect, and gallery owner, was in this sense a defining figure for the self-perception of Kim Gordon and her peers as multiple artists.[15]
One subculture that provided an appropriate breeding ground for such developments was New York’s Lower East Side, in whose galleries and clubs — such as CBGB’s — artists and musicians came together and initiated numerous collaborations. Again, this trend is represented by Sonic Youth, whose musical style is often termed ‘art punk,’ which sums up the band’s synthesis of experimental sounds and punk rock.[16] Since the group was founded, in addition to their own diverse activities, they have worked closely with designers, filmmakers, visual artists, and other musicians, including Mike Kelley, Richard Kern, Raymond Pettibon, and Richard Prince.
While none of these artists were concerned with exchanging one art form for another, purely pragmatic reasons did occasionally prompt such a switch. In the German Democratic Republic, for example, the fact that Cornelia Schleime was prohibited from exhibiting in 1981 caused the artist to join the punk movement and form the band [IMG Zwitschermaschine] before she returned to painting following her move to the Federal Republic of Germany some years later.[17]
Works: Ballet of Natural Disasters , Death Valley ’69, Dirty, Goo, O Superman, Shallow 1-21, Sonic Nurse, The Twitter-Machine, United States
People: Viv Albertine, Marc Almond, Laurie Anderson, Adam Ant, Mike Barson, Boy George, Frieder Butzmann, David Byrne, Jo Callis, James Chance, Chrislo , Walter Dahn, Christiane F., John Foxx, Kim Gordon, Rob Gotobed, Dan Graham, PJ Harvey, Mike Kelley, Richard Kern, Paul Klee, Graham Lewis, Lora Logic, Glen Matlock, Malcolm McLaren, Wolfgang Müller, Albert Oehlen, Markus Oehlen, Raymond Pettibon, Franz Pomassl, Richard Prince, Jamie Reid, Klaudia Schifferle, Cornelia Schleime, Patti Smith, Chris Stein, Joe Strummer, Alan Vega, Andy Warhol, Vivienne Westwood
Socialbodies: Adam and the Ants, Artforum, Blondie, Bow Wow Wow, Casino of Authenticity and Karaoke, CBGB, Destroy All Monsters, Die Hornissen, Die Tödliche Doris, documenta 7, documenta 8, Einstürzende Neubauten, Festival genialer Dilletanten, Fluxus, Geile Tiere, German-American-Friendship, Goldsmith College, Human League, Kleenex, LiLiPUT, Madness, Mittagspause, Salomé and Luciano Castelli, Sex Pistols, Sex, Slits, Soft Cell, Sonic Youth, Suicide, Talking Heads, The Clash, Ultravox, Vierte Wurzel aus Zwitschermaschine, Wire, X-Ray Spex , Zentrum für Kunst und Medientechnologie Karlsruhe