|
The First Art Newspaper on the Net |
|
Established in 1996 |
|
Sunday, December 22, 2024 |
|
What happens when we lose the art that brings us together? |
|
|
Caricatures of Broadway celebrities look out from a wall at the legendary Theater District restaurant Sardi's on March 12, 2020 in New York City. Spencer Platt/Getty Images/AFP.
by A.O. Scott
|
NEW YORK (NYT NEWS SERVICE).- What do we do now?
Its a big question as a matter of policy, national purpose and social cohesion its the big question made up of a knot of local, individual, practical decisions. What actions can each of us take to stay healthy, connected and sane, to fight the dangerous secondary infections of boredom, selfishness and panic? How are we going to stay busy? How are we going to keep ourselves entertained?
That last one may seem like a trivial problem with an easy solution. Lives and livelihoods are at stake, and theres still plenty to watch on television. Maybe the lamentations about the closing of restaurants, bars, nightclubs, theaters and museums represent the displacement of deeper fears about the wholesale collapse of civilization. But its also true that the suspension of those amusements of every form of cultural activity that involves the presence of other people is a grievous loss, and a cause for real grief.
We console ourselves with stopgaps and substitutes. Theres so much music and television to stream. There are stacks of books we never got around to reading, and games of meme-tag to play on social media. There are jokes to make about writing the next King Lear.
All of those energetic ways of making do may themselves be manifestations of grief signs that were in the bargaining stage, much as those last nights out in early and mid-March were expressions of denial. (Those are the first and third phases in the Kübler-Ross sequence. Did we skip the second one, anger, or are we just so used to being angry all the time that we didnt notice?)
The loss we are confronting is real and profound, even if it turns out to be temporary. We are undergoing a trauma that we cant fully comprehend. Denied our favorite sources of fun, we have also been robbed of the resources of meaning and community they represent.
Much discussion of the coronavirus impact on the arts has focused on economics, on the dire effects on box-office revenues and business models, and on our roles as workers and consumers. A vibrant marketplace has shut down; industries face devastation.
At the same time, our habits of cultural consumption connect us to an atavistic world of ritual, a way of being that money can never account for. The music fans who would have streamed into Coachella and the cinephiles alighting in Cannes retrace ancient routs and rites of pilgrimage. Bands on tour carry the memory of itinerant troubadours and acrobats caravanning from town to town, performing on makeshift stages in the village square. A movie house is like a house of worship: some congregations insist on silent contemplation, while others favor ecstatic call-and-response prayer.
Theater, the most protean of art forms, and one of the oldest, has an especially complex genome. Susan Sontag once described theater as this seasoned art, occupied since antiquity with all sorts of local offices enacting sacred rites, reinforcing communal loyalty, guiding morals, provoking the therapeutic discharge of violent emotions, conferring social status, giving practical instruction, affording entertainment, dignifying celebrations, subverting established authority. Thats only a partial list, and these offices persist, at least as latent possibilities and memory traces, at every performance of Hamilton or Our Town.
What unites those disparate functions is the way theater, like other public art forms, makes us aware of a boundary that it simultaneously allows us, at least for a moment, to cross. Art is a way of knowing, of seeing and feeling, the borders that separate work from leisure, the sacred from the secular, the ordinary from the exalted, passivity from action, life from death. It makes us witnesses and participants in the crossing of those frontiers, and in doing so makes visible and permeable the boundaries between our individual and communal selves. We are alone in the dark of the theater or the light of the museum, and also together.
For the last few years, motivated by affection rather than expertise, Ive taught a college course on postwar Italian cinema. One of the things I love about the movies we study and one of the things that makes them wonderfully resistant to classroom analysis is how they defy the usual categories. My students and I puzzle over what seem like basic questions of style and genre: comedy or tragedy? Satire or sincerity? Happy ending or sad? Everything is mixed together humor and pathos, horror and absurdity, Christian piety and pagan revelry, modern manners and primal urges.
Even the most austere filmmakers Vittorio De Sica in his late-1940s neorealist phase; Michelangelo Antonioni in his early-60s explorations of alienation cant avoid the warmth and noise of communal life. Virtually every classic Italian film includes a chaotic meal, a religious procession or festival, a gaggle of squealing children tumbling through the frame. Solemnity will always be punctured. Solitude exists to be interrupted. Life is intrusive, unruly and beautiful.
My hunch supported only by the haphazard, dreamy research of looking at pictures, moving and otherwise has always been that Italian filmmakers like De Sica, Roberto Rossellini and especially Federico Fellini were not only responding to the realities of Italian life in the hectic middle decades of the 20th century; they were also, consciously or not, refracting the influence of centuries of Italian art.
Renaissance and Baroque paintings of sacred subjects last suppers, crucifixions, the torments of saints bustle with profane life. The holy business at the center of the tableau is nearly upstaged by the flirting, drinking, gambling and fighting happening around the edges. Children and dogs cavort under the furniture. Elders grow distracted and sleepy. Adolescents roll their eyes in boredom. And for the viewer, wandering into the gallery hundreds of years too late for the party, the distinction between art and life dissolves. I know these people. We are these people.
Film scholar Joseph Luzzi, writing about Italian neorealism, describes the role of the social group in these films as chorality. The word evokes ancient Greek tragedy, in which the chorus played a central role in the drama. More than simply commenting on the main action, the chorus, at least in the highly speculative theory proposed by Nietzsche, was the true protagonist, linking the plays of Aeschylus, Sophocles and Euripides to even older Dionysian rituals. If the destruction of the hero provides a reminder of the inevitability of death, the voice of the chorus offers the compensatory, comforting lesson that life is at the bottom of things, despite all the changes of appearances, indestructibly powerful and pleasurable.
Recently, as communal life in Italy came to an agonized halt, the world caught a glimpse of this chorality in action. Videos of empty streets and locked-down high-rises brought to life by the singing of sequestered neighbors traveled around the internet. Like Italian movies, they mixed sentimentality with occasional silliness, but they also had a haunting, consoling aesthetic power.
Those songs, so potent in their impotence, so inessential and yet so necessary, were reminders of what we stand to lose, and why we cant stand to lose it. None of us is a hero: We are the chorus in this tragedy. We mourn for art because at the moment we are unable to mourn through art. What we do now is grieve, so that we can survive.
© 2020 The New York Times Company
|
|
Today's News
March 22, 2020
From victims to superwomen: Honoring female strength in Afghanistan
Kenny Rogers, who brought country music to a pop audience, dies at 81
Boris Yaro, whose ohoto of an assassination endures, dies at 81
Record-breaking Japanese whisky leads Sotheby's 'Finest & Rarest' auctions in London
Cardi Gallery hosts the most comprehensive exhibition of Mimmo Rotella's practice ever seen in the UK
Exhibition presents a series of animated political collages and landscape photographs by Catherine Opie
Phillips takes next steps in announcing sale dates for New York in June
Book gathers all of Albertus Seba's extraordinary illustrations
Florida International University museums engage arts and culture lovers working and learning at home
James Hatch, archivist of black theater, dies at 91
New book offers photographic insights into China's rapid changes within the time frame of the last 20 years
Now on view (online): Site-specific installation exploring the precariousness of living by Shaqayeq Arabi
Freelance musicians fear for future amid uncertainty
Lessons from my grandma on art, sex and life
How coronavirus-weary Americans are seeking joy
Freight+Volume opens Pungent Dystopia: A group exhibition
Object & Thing shifts 2nd edition dates to Nov 13-15
Home with your kids? Writers want to help
Broadway, shuttered by pandemic, reaches short-term pay deal
She had 3 jobs to support her music. Now all are gone.
Before Bach, he was Germany's greatest composer
Kahlil Joseph wins the 6th Eye Art & Film Prize
What happens when we lose the art that brings us together?
Wilding Cran Gallery opens an online exhibition of works by Fran Siegel and Paul Scott
Different Generator Sizes That Will Tailor Fit Your House
Why You Should Take Yoga and Meditation Online With Glo
|
|
|
|
|
Museums, Exhibits, Artists, Milestones, Digital Art, Architecture, Photography, Photographers, Special Photos, Special Reports, Featured Stories, Auctions, Art Fairs, Anecdotes, Art Quiz, Education, Mythology, 3D Images, Last Week, . |
|
|
|
Royalville Communications, Inc produces:
|
|
|
Tell a Friend
Dear User, please complete the form below in order to recommend the Artdaily newsletter to someone you know.
Please complete all fields marked *.
Sending Mail
Sending Successful
|
|