Monday, 7 March 2016


Joseph Cornell, Wanderlust, Royal Academy of Arts, review: 'spellbinding'

Born on Christmas Eve, 1903, he spent years working in the textile industry and living for his lunch hour, which offered respite from the daily grind. He rarely left New York City, did not travel beyond the United States, and never married – devoting himself instead to his mother and his wheelchair-bound younger brother, Robert, who suffered from cerebral palsy.

For most of his adult life he cared for them both in an ordinary house in an unremarkable suburb of Queens.

And yet, despite masquerading as a wage-slave leading a humdrum, nine-to-five existence, Cornell – arguably more than any other artist of the 20th century – was blessed with an interior life so rich and vast that it provided him with all the sustenance and excitement that he could ever need.



The fruits of his magical imagination are currently on display in a spellbinding new survey of his career at the Royal Academy – the first major exhibition of his work in Europe since a show at the Whitechapel Gallery nearly 35 years ago.

Cornell was an obsessive hoarder – and during his lunch breaks, as well as over weekends, he loved roaming New York to seek out junkshops and second-hand bookstores. One antiquarian bookshop on Lexington Avenue provided him, he said, with “a sanctuary and retreat of infinite pleasures”.

Like a magpie drawn to sparkly trinkets, he was forever on the hunt for ephemera and sundry bits and pieces – feathers, marbles, stamps, seashells, clay pipes, compasses, balls of twine, antique celestial charts: things, in other words, which many people might overlook, but which Cornell, who was self-taught, brought home to be categorised and stored in his studio in the cellar.

These found objects were the raw materials of his art. With the delicacy and precision of a poet searching for and then deploying the perfect word, Cornell would select an item and arrange it alongside others inside the glass-fronted “shadow boxes” for which he became renowned – in his homeland, at least, if less so on this side of the Atlantic.

As the scores of examples at the Royal Academy attest, these shadow boxes were curious, fascinating, hybrid works of art: part collage, part “painting”, part sculpted relief.

They are the visual equivalent of a sonnet or a verse of intricate metaphysical poetry: evocative, ingenious, and pregnant with complex associations and meaning. Cornell didn’t need to travel because his “wanderlust” (as the exhibition’s title puts it) was sated by his own private peregrinations of the mind.



Since his wooden boxes are filled with delicate baubles and moving parts, they are fragile – and consequently, as if in honour of their maker, they rarely travel. Therefore to see so many of them in the RA’s exhibition, which boasts around 80 works of art, is special.

This isn’t to say that Cornell is an unknownhis creations are a staple in textbooks about 20th-century art – but, outside America, it is rare to be able to inspect his work up close and en masse. As a result, for many people, the RA’s show will feel like a revelation.

It also offers an opportunity to consider his achievement. What, as an artist, made him tick? The clue comes in the first gallery, where we encounter a number of early collages made using 19th-century engravings that are indebted to Max Ernst. Surrealism (minus the sex) was always Cornell’s lodestar: in particular, it inspired his use of unexpected juxtapositions to create poetic effects, which remained a principal technique throughout his career. The Surrealists, of course, were fascinated by dreams, and Cornell’s shadow boxes feel like dreams given palpable form.

The curators at the RA argue that Cornell was a great innovator – but I’m not sure that’s entirely right. Unlike some Surrealists, as well as other Modernists, Cornell wasn’t interested in smashing up form; rather, his art has a reactionary quality, in the sense that it always had one eye on tradition. He wanted his constructions to have a sentimental character, evoking 17th-century cabinets of curiosities or dusty cupboards in an apothecary’s workshop.

The idea that he was a proto-Abstract Expressionist because he dripped paint across the glass fronts of one or two boxes is misleading (though it is more persuasive to argue that by incorporating serial imagery, as well as mass-media photographs of film stars, he arguably heralded Pop Art).

His response to the Second World War – a “shooting gallery” of cut-out colour lithographs of tropical birds behind a pane of (neatly) shattered glass – is timid and impotent.

Even when he channelled wider Modernist concerns – inspired by Mondrian, for instance, to use a “grid” to structure his compositions – he did so in a way that felt unique to him. No man is an island, but Cornell was unusually detached and self-sufficient, all the same.

Moreover, his Achilles heel as an artist was a tendency to allow some of his shadow boxes to become overly fey, whimsical, or cutesy.

Still, at his best, Cornell made art that was utterly entrancing. I think of him as a kind of poet who chose to work with images rather than words. At his command, the banal could become marvellous: his small boxes leave us with the head-spinning sensation that they contain not throwaway odds and ends but entire worlds.

The Royal Academy should be congratulated for gathering together many of them in a beautiful exhibition. My only gripe is that the show is opening in what feels like the wrong season. Cornell’s nostalgic shadow boxes have a magical, Christmassy, wintry-wonderland sort of aspect – and they should have brightened up the darkest months of the year, and not appeared during midsummer.

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