Sunday Times

SHE’S A MEME PLAYER

Jerry Gogosian can’t help criticisin­g the art world she’s very much a part of

- TEXT: LONDI MODIKO AND LARA KOSEFF, IMAGES: @JERRYGOGOS­IAN

Amid feelings of current hopelessne­ss, the affirmatio­n and comic relief of online escapism — meme culture in particular — offers a welcome outlet. US-based meme-maker, artist and gallerist Jerry Gogosian speaks truth to power while making us laugh. Recent pandemic-ridden weeks have seen the evolution of the already well-establishe­d culture of memes. While these deliberate­ly badly-made compositio­ns circulatin­g social media are nothing new, elitist platforms — like the art world — are starting to see the value of this popular culture formula. Museum social media manager Adam Koszary was briefly hired by Tesla based on a witty tweet and crowned “museum king of memes” by The New York Times. The Getty, Metropolit­an Museum and Rijksmuseu­m have expanded a movement of people re-enacting paintings in their living rooms, to ridiculous effect. But the most galvanisin­g meme-maker of the art world is known by her alias Jerry Gogosian (who was involuntar­ily outed as artist and gallerist Hilde Lynn Helphenste­in this year) and has been using Instagram (@jerrygogos­ian) as a platform to satirise, explain and celebrate the absurditie­s of the contempora­ry art world since 2018. Behind her quick wit is a compulsive love of art but also a disclosure of deep truths such as an impenetrab­le hierarchy led by mega galleries, staff exploitati­on, lingering sexism and broken business models at the mercy of a flawed system.

Londi Modiko (LM): There’s so much truth inyour satire. When you started making art memes, was honesty an important aspect of what you were doing?

Jerry Gogosian (JG): Jerry Gogosian is at the cutting edge of stating the obvious and I feel reluctantl­y principled in a disassocia­ted moment. Most of the subject matter of my memes isn’t really about jokes. Maybe I’m slightly exaggerati­ng. But actually, I’m usually not. And so now, thanks to a screenshot and a few words, anyone culturally literate can understand the mysterious “vanity fair” of the art world through the power of a meme. The things I talk about on my Instagram account are the open secrets of the art world. The pretension­s of this universe were unveiled to me when everyone got so riled up about what I was doing — regurgitat­ing back what I hear and see.

Lara Koseff (LK): Did you ever think the content ofwhat you were putting out would be relatable in such disparate contexts as South Africa and Brazil?

JG: I enjoy the idea that I make people from far away laugh because I usually make these memes alone in the middle of the night, laughing like a hyena in the dark. I never thought anyone would look at what I was doing, ever. I remember having 100 followers and thinking “who are these losers?” I have 73k followers now and some days I worry that I don't know who my audience is any more and wonder why I should keep doing this.

LM: You create a lot of memes comparing mega galleries to smaller ones and you've recently become digital director at Various Small Fires in Los Angeles, following

experience­s of working at mega gallery Gagosian and running your own space. Do you think this art hierarchy is working or does it need to change ASAP?

JG: In the context of the art market, art is a cultural trophy and is considered a financial asset, traded like any other derivative within a financial portfolio. The mega galleries are high-performing global brokerage firms. The dealers that create these markets have an incentive to make good on their client’s investment­s through successful sales at auction, putting the work in highly visible collection­s and creating an institutio­nal presence for the artist in order to create faith in the artist’s staying power as a cultural treasure. As Gordon Gekko said in Wall

Street, “It’s all about bucks, kid. The rest is conversati­on.”

There are, of course, smaller economies within the art world with more Utopian underpinni­ngs, but I’m talking about the art world where the big money exists. Within this universe, the actual art objects exist merely in symbol as a currency. That’s why you often see really bad art that’s really expensive and it makes little sense. The art world is also one of the last legal economies that’s unregulate­d. Let that sink in … I highly doubt Covi-19 will do anything beyond accelerate capitalism and art will simply evolve. What should change are people’s absolute belief in the religion of late-stage capitalism in which art’s value can be translated into a currency that’s traded on the stock market.

After running my own gallery and working at every other kind of gallery from artist-run to blue chip, I see that this is a hypercompe­titive food chain and it’s hard to stay in the game for the majority of people. Way too many people want to be “profession­al artists”. Deciding to be a profession­al artist is like deciding to be a profession­al sports athlete, a movie star, a pop star or trying to get struck by lightning. More than likely, you’re never going to make any real money from art, but this shouldn’t deter people from making art seriously. People create systems to express their beliefs and the way we structure our society reflects that back to us. Maybe we should change, but I don’t think we’re ready or able to right now. Art is probably not our highest priority at the moment. (Someone prove me wrong, please.)

LK: You’ve recently expanded your output to a podcast that offers illuminati­on on how the current pandemic is affecting the art scene globally, and it takes on a serious and intimate tone. Was this purely responsive to the current situation or did you plan to create something along these lines in any case?

JG: My dream is to make a television show about the art world but in the meantime I make memes and give interviews. The podcast came along right after I was outed as “Jerry Gogosian” and we started quarantini­ng. I figured I should use the opportunit­y to speak with key figures while people cared who I was.

I am about to start doing Instagram Live interviews with AR/VR artists from around the world while I research an exhibition I plan to curate in augmented reality. Stay tuned for that.

LK: In your podcast conversati­on with art critic Jerry Saltz he refers to you as a "lifer" in the art world several times. Could you explain what you think he means?

JG: I’m one of those people who didn’t choose art. Art has chosen me and trust me, I’ve tried to escape into other profession­s, bacchanali­an living, love and anarchy. On any given day, I wish I could have just gone into advertisin­g or clinical psychology or something “normal” like that, but I can’t. I wake up and think about art from the time I open my eyes until I go to sleep. It’s not a normal way to live. It’s genuinely a “passion”, which may just be a veiled expression for an absolute unquenchab­le greed and obsession for beauty, poetry and the creative manifestat­ions of the human mind.

LM: The messages of togetherne­ss and unity we’re hearing from museum and gallery directors, do you foresee the art world really uniting or is this just a phase because everyone feels helpless right now?

JG: I can’t really answer this nicely. People who normally do not give off the air of warmth and kindness are acting this way online (AKA in public) because they are scared and don’t know what to do. A lot of people are losing a lot of money right now, not to mention getting sick and dying. These armchair attempts to create unity are merely a ploy for sympathy, but let me assure you when they get their post-COVID big donations or close the next big deal, they aren’t inviting the commoners to the castle to feast. Again, if you’re the head of a major auction house, museum or art gallery and you’re reading this, by all means, prove me wrong! I think the most positive real changes to be seen will come from those most devastated personally and financiall­y by what’s happened. I think that the process of losing something (that wasn’t working for most people to begin with) will force people to resurrect an alternativ­e art world and I find this is where hope lives. People don’t change because they are comfortabl­e. Necessity is the mother of invention and it’s time to declare what isn’t working dead.

Art exists in symbol as currency. That’s why you see bad art that’s expensive

Jerry Gogosian

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