Jonathan Jones (journalist)

Jonathan Jones
Born
Wales
NationalityBritish
Alma materUniversity of Cambridge
OccupationArt critic, The Guardian
Spouse(s)Married
Children1 daughter

Jonathan Jones is a British art critic who has written for The Guardian since 1999. He has appeared in the BBC television series Private Life of a Masterpiece and in 2009 was a judge for the Turner Prize. He has also been a judge for the BP Portrait Award.

Early life

Jones was born in Wales, and brought up in North Wales. Both his parents were school teachers and the family visited Italy in the summer holidays which kindled his interest in art. He studied history at the University of Cambridge and, at one time, wanted to be a professional historian. Jones developed an interest in modern art while living in the United States, where his wife was an academic at Brown University. On his return to the United Kingdom he wrote freelance for magazines and art features for The Guardian.

Journalism

On Mark Leckey

Jones had a public feud with artist Mark Leckey, who won the Turner Prize in 2008. By 2011, Whitehot Magazine referred to "the ongoing 3-year battle" between the two. Later that year, Jones gave a highly negative review to Leckey's exhibition at the Serpentine Gallery, describing it as being "full of lumbering inanities". The review provoked strong responses in art circles and many comments on The Guardian's webpage, including replies from Jones, forcing Jones on to the defensive in the reader comments section time and time again. Jones held to his position that the exhibition was just bad, and his review simply an honest reaction, replying to one reader that he had used "invective because – let's face it – if you really do feel dislike, you may as well exploit the entertainment value of that rage. In other words – bad reviews can be bloody good fun to read", adding "So here is where I am really coming from... I believe ninety-five percent of the British contemporary art that is endlessly promoted by galleries, museums and the media is worthless" and, probably tongue-in-cheek, "Artblogging, it's the new rock n roll". Writing in frieze.com, Isobel Harbison called the review part of a "trend in broadsheet art criticism of opinion-mongering and reader-goading."

On Grayson Perry

Jones has also engaged in a long-running feud with the potter Grayson Perry, which began in 2001 with his review of the exhibition New Labour at the Saatchi Gallery, entitled "If I had a hammer...", assumedly in reference to Perry's work. The review of the group show opens with 3 paragraphs deriding Perry's pottery, recommending "Smash them and bury the pieces". Later, he states outright that Perry is "a terrible artist". The feud might have shown signs of ending in an article published in December 2009, in which Jones details his regrets as an art critic in an act of "seasonal goodwill". In the piece, he admits that "later I found a lot to admire in aspects of his [Perry's] work". In 2012, while taking issue with a tweet Perry sent about Leonardo da Vinci, Jones does acknowledge that he "says a lot of interesting things". However, in a 2013 article, entitled "Grayson Perry: a master of rabble-rousing and little else", Jones doubles down on his opinions of Perry, calling him a "fifth rate potter", and "a pundit whose punditry is underwritten by a spurious claim to be a serious artist". In 2015, Jones reviewed Perry's show at the Turner Contemporary, Margate, with the title quote "Like being trapped in a room full of trendy folk talking bollocks", giving the show two stars, concluding that the work is "art for those who need to be told what they are looking at and why it matters".

In 2016, Perry quoted Jones' comment "Suburban popular culture" on a sketch for a vase proposed for a show at the Serpentine Gallery, misspelling Jones' name as "Johnathan" in the process (it is unclear whether this is deliberate). Jones responded to this in an article entitled "Quote me on this, Grayson: you're not a true artist at all", in which he declares himself "no snob", extensively quotes his earlier critiques of Perry's works, and refers to the quotation as "snarky, obvious, holier-than-thou satire". In this article, he also references a "Be Nice to Grayson period" during which Jones "really, really tried to see the best in him [Perry]" (while dates aren't specified, this is assumedly the 2009-2012 period discussed above). The article concludes with similarly strong language, and a challenge: "Grayson Perry is what happens when art becomes a pseudo intellectual entertainment for a world that is too busy to look and too distracted to feel: an artist for people who can’t be bothered with art. Now put that on a pot."

On photography

Jones has expressed varying opinions on photography. In January 2013 he wrote that "Photography is the serious art of our time" and the only art that devotes the same "attention to the stuff that matters" as great artists of the past. In December 2014, however, prompted by the high price paid for a print by the photographer Peter Lik, Jones started a column by declaring that "Photography is not an art", and went on to say that, "this hollow and overblown creation exposes the illusion that lures us all, when we're having a good day with a good camera – the fantasy that taking a picture is the same thing as making a work of art."

On Wikipedia

In February 2014, in discussing a Wikipedia project to increase articles on women in the arts, Jones wrote that Wikipedia "is a corrupting force" that is "eroding the world's intellect" through a relativist approach to knowledge.

On Terry Pratchett

In August 2015, shortly after the death of Terry Pratchett, Jones wrote an article titled "Get real. Terry Pratchett is not a literary genius", criticising Pratchett's books as "ordinary potboilers" not worth the time to read. The piece attracted criticism including a response by Sam Jordison on The Guardian's book blog, which defended Pratchett's work and criticised Jones for commenting on books despite admitting that he had not read them. Jones wrote a follow-up piece after reading Small Gods, in which he referred to his initial column as his "most shameful moment as a critic". He praised some of the book's wit and entertainment value, but still found that its prose and characters fell short of what he considered literary fiction.

Publications

  • The lost battles: Leonardo, Michelangelo and the artistic duel that defined the Renaissance. Knopf, 2012. ISBN 0307594750
  • The loves of the artists: Art and passion in the Renaissance. Simon & Schuster, 2013. ISBN 0857203207
  • Sensations: The Story of British Art from Hogarth to Banksy. Laurence King Publishing, 2019. ISBN 9781786272973

Personal life

Jones is married, with one daughter, and lives in London.


This page was last updated at 2021-11-03 18:54 UTC. Update now. View original page.

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