More Bad News
A solo exhibition by Dougal McKenzie

Re-opening Wednesday 2nd September!

 

 

One red herring and one MacGuffin. MacGuffin: an object, event, or character in a film or story that serves to set and keep the plot in motion, despite usually lacking intrinsic importance. As popularised by Alfred Hitchcock.

This exhibition was intended to be a painter’s homage to Peter Bogdanovich’s 1971 movie ‘The Last Picture Show’. It has necessitated very different twists and turns along the way as McKenzie began to research Bogdanovich’s life and oeuvre in more depth. It ultimately led to McKenzie questioning how one reconciles the love of great art (referring to the movies) and its often nasty underbelly.

The song ‘You Oughta Be In Pictures’, written in 1934, was to become the unofficial anthem of the American film industry. It was notably sung by the actors and audience at the end of the 1973 Oscars, led by John Wayne. This had been preceded by Sacheen Littlefeather ‘refusing’ Marlon Brando’s award on his behalf, in protest at the treatment and portrayal of Native Americans. Littlefeather had also appeared in Playboy magazine around this time and, like Marilù Tolo who had featured in Penthouse in 1969, saw this as the only viable way of promoting her career.

The research that fanned out from ‘The Last Picture Show’ led McKenzie to discover the following things: that Bogdanovich’s Yugoslavian father had been a painter; that the founder of Penthouse magazine, Bob Guccione, had been a failed painter; that the theme of ‘representing’ Native Americans featured in the paintings of Bogdanovich’s father, in Marlon Brando’s refusal to collect his Oscar for ‘The Godfather’ (a film which Bogdanovich had turned down the opportunity to direct) and also in Orson Welles’ last unmade film ‘The Other Side of the Wind’ (in which Bogdanovich appears, and also in which Welles’ Yugoslavian partner Oja Kodar ‘plays’ a Native American); that Bogdanovich’s relationship with former Playboy model Dorothy Stratten coincided with her brutal murder by her estranged husband; that Bogdanovich lay the blame for this squarely at the door of Playboy’s Hugh Heffner; that in a bid to out-rival Playboy, Bob Guccione lost a fortune and had to sell-off his priceless art collection.

Through the researching of these co-incidental (yet very much connected) events, McKenzie discovered that a film treatment called ‘More Bad News’ was found with one of the auctioned Guccione paintings, behind the backing of a Renoir bather. The name on the film treatment’s title page, Aby E. Robins, is an anagram of Serbian Boy… Serbian is Peter Bogdanovich’s first language.

About the artist

Dougal McKenzie was born in Edinburgh, Scotland in 1968. He studied Painting and Drawing at Gray’s School of Art in Aberdeen, Scotland from 1986-90 and on the M.A. Fine Art Course at the University of Ulster at Belfast, Northern Ireland from 1990-91. Dougal was a Co-Director at Catalyst Arts in Belfast from 1994 to 1996, and a Lecturer in Painting at Limerick School of Arts and Design from 1996 to 2004. He lives and works in Belfast NI.

Image: “You Oughta Be In Pictures (Portrait of Marilù Tolo)”, 2019 Collage, marker pen and oil paint on original pages from a 1969 edition of Penthouse magazine, on mounting board.

Documentation by Simon Mills

Supported by Arts Council of Northern Ireland and Belfast City Council

Part of the Imagine! Belfast Festival