Best Supporting Artists

May 23rd, 2008

Kirk Douglas as Vincent Van Gogh in “Lust for Life” (1956)

Artists in films tend to act as shorthand for oversensitive loners, just as lawyers in films are shorthand for unscrupulous money-grubbers and people with British accents are shorthand for oleaginous bad guys. Jeffrey Wright as Basquiat, Ed Harris as Pollock, Salma Hayek as Kahlo, Kirk Douglas as Van Gogh: each presents the artist’s work as an inevitable byproduct of a life lived at maximum intensity.

Actors seem to enjoy playing artists because it’s the stuff of Oscars: lots of shouty scenes, gruff sex, and jittery tics. (It may also be because of an insecurity about the validity of their own status as artists: making artists behave like actors has, in its own way, a kind of symbiotic effect). “Vincent!” bellows Anthony Quinn. “Paul!” yelps Kirk Douglas, embracing him like it’s 1888. The best is Anthony Hopkins’ Picasso (Surviving Picasso), who capers around like a high camp sex dwarf.

Is it that the idea of being an artist is so alien to everyday experience that it can only be expressed through an actorly language reserved for reclusive mathematicians, effete eccentrics and serial killers? Perhaps this is too harsh. The truth is that the process of making art is often not very exciting to watch. Even Pollock, whose hoary myth would suggest some sort of high-kicking John Wayne, comes across like your boring uncle at Christmas in Hans Namuth’s 1950 film, painstakingly describing his technique with all the panache of Ben Affleck reading the ingredients on a packet of dried plums. Maybe what’s needed is a greater willingness to go completely off-script, acknowledge that the artistic process of necessity involves lots of sitting around, and go hog wild. Better yet, go Wild Hogs: how about John Travolta as Cy Twombly? Martin Lawrence as Martin Puryear? Tim Allen as Jasper Johns? Suggestions welcome.


5 Responses to “Best Supporting Artists”

  1. Tom Juneau on May 24, 2008 8:52 am

    Those seeking the ultimate kitchen roll dispenser from The Academy will no doubt be looking at the alpha male artists section of Waterstones (british for high street bookshop), but there is room in Hollywood for more than this. Two exceptions of note: Bowie as Warhol in Basquiat and of course Leonardo as your standard Celtic artist-flaneur in Titanic (the inspiration behind Simon Starling?).

    I’d like to think Christopher Walken was being lined up to play Lucien Freud. A Freud biopic must be sitting underneath the drumming fingers of a hundred studio executives.

    Reply

  2. Bubbles on May 24, 2008 10:54 am

    Now don’t forget the artist-as-comedy-loony welshman as played by Rhys Ifans in Notting Hill…

    By far the best artist on film: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CrtlQKWvs3k

    Reply

  3. Adrian Duran on May 26, 2008 10:45 pm

    Sly, as always expected from and delivered by Mr. Street. Please let us not forget the Michelangelesque Heston, or perhaps was it the other way around.

    Reply

  4. Mary Morris on May 27, 2008 2:01 pm

    Jade Goody as Tracy Emin, please.

    Reply

  5. Quiet on the set: keep noise to a Minimum | Art21 Blog on August 13, 2008 3:58 pm

    [...] being redundant, but that won’t stop me from piggybacking. Ben Street’s post “Best Supporting Artists” reminded me of a piece I’d seen in at the MOCA Los Angeles in 2004 as part of ‘A [...]

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