New Brow at the NWFF Closes Tonight
The documentary New Brow, showing for one more night at the NWFF (7 p.m., 9 p.m.), is an enjoyable if somewhat amateurish fan letter to the Juxtapoz scene. Shot on cheap-looking digital video with tinny sound quality (or maybe it was NWFF’s system?), this series of effusive artist testimonials about why they like their own work features copious footage of their distinctive and weird paintings, short and funny cameos by the movement’s primary stars–particularly Robert Williams, hilarious and ornery as always–and brief appearances by local luminaries Kirsten Anderson of Roq La Rue, Larry Reid of Fantagraphics, and Seattle’s best porcelain weapons manufacturer Charlie Krafft.
As a documentary, New Brow could use some teeth. The “lowbrow” art movement (yeah yeah, “everyone hates that label”) came into prominence explicitly because there was a strong need for a kind of art that was more personal and craft-based. This need wasn’t met by the exclusive, ostensibly highbrow art world of the post-conceptual, Jeff Koons/Damien Hirst “fake smart” hack variety. No one from that world or any critics of the “lowbrow” type of work appear in this film to comment on the history and dynamic of these different art scenes or make any qualitative judgments about the work on display. As fun and interesting as the “lowbrow” stuff is, even Robert Williams–in an essay for Juxtapoz that I can’t find online–has voiced dissent against the stasis and cold comfort of too much kitsch and unquestioning group think. A better documentary would have shared that ethic.
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Alan Goodin
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Tanem