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Albert Caspar Greenspan, 1968
* New York City 1928 - + New York City 2010
Photo by Tom Warren
Pressinformation
October 10. 2008
A. C. Greenspan about George Cup & Steve Elliott
A Reconstruction
There are artists who suddenly disappear from the field of vision of the art
world, although they
had an exemplary significance for their contemporaries.
The artist-couple George Cup & Steve
Elliott represent one of those cases.
Only a small group of art collectors and friends, among
whom I count myself,
has preserved their memory during these last twenty years.
George Cup was convicted in 1986 for the alleged murder of his romantic and
professional
partner Steve Elliott and was imprisoned in a New York
penitentiary. As a consequence, the
oeuvre of these two artists, who
numbered among the founders of American Minimal Art, was
almost completely
“erased.” In recent years, none of us believed that their oeuvre would
ex-
perience a belated recognition some twenty-two years after this grievous
error of justice.
It is above all due to the initiative of the George Cup Research Center,
established in 2006 with
offices in New York and Hannover, that the works of
the two artists may now be seen in Ger-
many for the first time since their
last exhibition at the Sidney Janis Gallery in New York in 1985.
In a dramatic manner, George Cup’s state of health deteriorated so extremely
during the prepa-
rations for the exhibition that in July 2008, two months
before the opening in Wolfsburg and barely
a year after his name was cleared
and he was released from prison, he died at the age of
seventy-eight.
The family of George Cup, who was born in 1930 under the name of Georg Anton
Kupsch in
Heßlingen, the city which today is Wolfsburg, immigrated in 1936
to the United States and settled
in New York City. Steve Elliott, born in
1933 in Nordhorn under the name Stefan Berliott, grew up
at only a few
miles’ distance from George Cup, on the other side of the Hudson River in
New
Jersey. The two met in 1954 at the Art Students League in New York,
where Steve Elliott was
studying. At this point in time, Cup was still
pursuing his ambition of becoming an architect, but
he definitively
abandoned these plans in 1960. Designs dating from 1956 for a house shaped
in the form of a cube and covered in black slate slabs, however, already
provide indications of
his subsequent artistic development.
As is typical for many artistic couples, George Cup & Steve Elliott were
connected by an ambivalent relationship. George Cup had an uncontrollable
temper and was known for his quarrelsomeness, resistance to compromise, and
aggressivity. Robert Rauschenberg even described his imprisonment as the
logical consequence of his hot-tempered character.[1] And I myself
increasingly came to view Cup as unpredictable. One time in an exhibition,
he even spit and urinated on works that displeased him; during disputes he
knocked glasses from the hands of gallerists, or he stomped to pieces his
own works which had already been sold. This sort of behavior may have a
positive effect on the image of some artists, but not with Cup and Elliott.
According to Betty Parsons, “…everyone took offense at his arrogance,”[2]
and Andy Warhol stated repeatedly, “He’s an asshole,” and added, “an
asshole, but a handsome one.”[3]
Steve Elliott, on the other hand, appeared to be the exact opposite of the
eccentric personality of George Cup. He was introverted and always courteous
when I visited him in his studio, where he could be found day and night,
whereas George to a large extent made his appearance alone or in the company
of other men in New York’s gay community. Although the works almost without
exception were signed by George, many considered Steve to be the actual
creative and dynamic force of the couple. André Emmerich described their
relationship in 1974 “…as a fragile give-and-take that had its ups and
downs. George needed Steve for inner support and Steve needed George for
external representation.”[4] Even if the assignment of creatorship proves to
be problematic in individual cases, a comparison of the autonomous early
works of Cup and Elliott with the oeuvre of the artist-couple and the late
works of Cup which were created in prison demonstrates that two independent
artists had found in their mutual connection a “critical mass” which is
perceptible even today as a source of inspiration.
At the end of the nineteen-seventies, George Cup began for a while to shift
his chief place of residence to Paris. The reason for these stays in Paris
was the relationship to an “official Frenchy,” as he was affectionately
called by Cup. All the way down to today, it remains unclear what individual
was hidden behind this designation. Even the George Cup Research Center
remains discreet and speaks only of a “respected personality from public
life in France.”[5] The foundation established in 2006 by this unknown
Frenchman has made available on loan a majority of the works which are to be
seen at the Kunstverein Wolfsburg: “The French Collection.” Because the
collection was stored in a cellar in the Parisian arrondissement du Louvre
and was exposed to humidity, extensive restoration work was necessary in the
run-up to the exhibition.
“The French affair” was initially no more a burden upon the relationship
between Elliott and Cup than were the other affairs which Cup openly
conducted during his thirty-two-year relationship with Elliott, and with
which the names of John Cage, Andy Warhol and Robert Rauschenberg have been
linked. At the end of 1985, however, Steve Elliott took what had become an
inevitable step and moved out of their common New York apartment. The
separation thrust Cup completely out of his unstable equilibrium. Attempts
to clarify the situation ended with Cup’s violent intrusion into the new
apartment of Elliott, who answered with a restraining order. The situation
escalated in the spring of 1986: Cup, who could no longer control his
aggressions, was the subject of two complaints for bodily injury after
fights in New York clubs. It was only possible to avert judicial processes
through the payment of damages for pain and suffering. These two events were
of decisive importance for Cup’s indictment and conviction when, three
months later, Steve Elliott was found dead in his New York apartment. The
media and popular opinion were unanimous in their belief that George Cup and
killed his partner. Thus even before the trial began, the New York Post ran
the headline “Cup Kills Elliott!”[6] Eyewitnesses from the neighboring
building claim to have seen Cup at the scene of the crime on the night in
question. His extensively documented proclivity for violence along with
further pieces of evidence led to a lifelong conviction, which he began to
serve in November 1986 in a New York penitentiary. During the course of his
imprisonment, there began an almost systematic “erasure” of the artistic
works by Cup and Elliott. Sculptures were disassembled and disappeared;
works were removed from the collections of the Whitney Museum of American
Art and the Guggenheim Museum, and today they cannot even be found in the
inventory lists. Up to the founding of the George Cup Research Center, it
almost seemed as if the artist-couple had never existed. The reasons for
this radical sequence of events are puzzling and even today the matter has
not been cleared up, nor are any written statements by responsible figures
to be found.[7]
Even when surprisingly, at the beginning of 2007, George Cup was able to
prove his innocence with regard to the death of Steve Elliott and, with no
attention being paid by the media, was released from prison as a free man,
numerous questions remained unanswered. Why had Cup not commented for twenty
years concerning the events that took place in 1986? Why did he continue to
remain silent after his exoneration? For whatever reasons he possibly held
himself responsible for the death of his partner, here as well he never gave
us an answer.
In the summer of 2007, the George Cup Research Center contacted the artist
and prepared, in cooperation with the two exhibition houses in Wolfsburg and
Nordhorn, Cup’s and Elliott’s respective places of birth, a first
inventory-taking of those works which, in addition to those from the “French
Collection,” were still available. Already in 1991 a storage site in
Brooklyn had been dismantled and its works destroyed. During the course of
its investigations, the Research Center became aware of my collection
consisting of forty-two works, most of which are being presented for the
first time in the Städtische Galerie Nordhorn. The models and photographs of
objects and installations from this compilation were taken as the basis for
the realization of the exhibitions in Germany, which were conceived in close
cooperation with Cup.
The large-format installation SQUARE-ROUND # 4, dating from 1973, has been
reconstructed for the Städtische Galerie Nordhorn according to drawings and
designs. Ten square wooden panels set up one behind the other present to
view a succession of ten squares cut out of the panels, each varying by a
few degrees so that in a certain sense there is created a squaring of the
circle, which is gradated from the black of the first panel past various
shades of gray to the white of the final panel. This installation is
characteristic of Cup’s and Elliott’s works from these years. Reduced
geometrical surfaces in various sizes which nonetheless are always related
to human dimensions subdivide, individually or serially, the entire space,
floor or wall. In spite of rigorous structural clarity and monochromatic
coloration, there arises a complex interplay among open and closed volumes,
internal and external forms, object, space and viewer. In addition to the
space-encompassing installations, various wall objects combined with
fluorescent tubes and dating from the late nineteen-sixties are presented,
as well as paintings from 1956 and 1962 which are integrated into the
three-dimensional objects. They already point towards the development of a
seminally new vocabulary of reduced, three-dimensional bodies, a formal
language which is characteristic of the late works of Cup and Elliott. The
static forms of the oil paintings were set in motion in later years with the
help of animated films, so that the interplay of movement and music, the
tradition of Oskar Fischinger, Hans Richter and other representatives of the
early abstract film, was taken up and reinterpreted. The connection between
form and sound consists of twenty-six animated films which were created
between 1974 and 1979 on 8 mm film and which, because of their bad
condition, have been digitally remastered for the exhibition. In the
experimental film Loop # 25 (1972), the camera zooms towards a photograph
which Cup is holding in his hands and which, for its part, shows Cup with a
photograph in his hands. For five minutes, the camera zooms in a straight
line through the sites depicted on various photographs. Further animation
films and kinetic objects, as well as artist’s books and the video
installation BLACK BOX # 2 from 1979 are distributed between the two
exhibition houses and offer a comprehensive view of the oeuvre of George Cup
& Steve Elliott.
These first two exhibitions of the German-American representatives of
Minimal Art, George Cup & Steve Elliott, since their disappearance from the
field of vision of the art world hopefully represent only the beginning of a
new evaluation of their work. The future will show whether this rediscovery
of George Cup & Steve Elliott will remove the shroud of silence from them
once and for all and will assign to them their well-earned status in the
history of art.
[1] Robert Rauschenberg on
12.05.1986 in a letter to the author
[2] Betty Parsons on 05.10.1979 in a letter to the author
[3] Andy Warhol on 03.24.1979 in a letter to the author
[4] André Emmerich in a letter to the author on 01.12.1974
[5] The George Cup Research Center on 03.28. 2007 in a letter to the author
[6] New York Post from 05.14.1986, p.1
[7] The George Cup Research Center on 06.11.2007 in a letter to the author
Please contact the Research Center for images:
service[at]georgecupresearchcenter.com .
The George Cup Research Center
The George Cup & Steve Elliot Research Center
323 West, 39th Street W, NY, New York, 10018
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