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Alice Neel

By Julia Wallace

Published on January 23, 2008

Alice Neel is a spiritual and tonal clone of My Architect, Nathaniel Kahn's icky, self-aggrandizing 2003 documentary about his father. Like Kahn, Andrew Neel plays a dual role here as both the director and the grandson of the eponymous Alice, a well-known portraitist, and, also like Kahn, he insists on picking at the scabs of his family's secrets to the point of viewer embarrassment. In one scene, the filmmaker exchanges a volley of "fuck you"s with his father; in another, he prods his uncle to discuss childhood abuse. Alice comes off best, always painting, never whining, despite a lack of funds or fame. When the brash, bad-boy theatrics of Abstract Expressionism consumed the 1950s art world, Neel's figurative humanism was so unfashionable that she and her children lived on welfare. Still, she sketched on the streets of Greenwich Village and took lovers of a most unsuitable sort, including a "Mephistophelean" dope fiend. Neel is a compelling subject, but whom exactly is this film meant to serve? Certainly not the artist or an audience that wants to know her — Neel is more alive in one of her paintings than in all of the voluminous video footage her grandson thrusts upon us.



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