I am no art conossieur but I know what I like. About 10
years ago I accompanied my brother Steve , a professional artist , to
the EXQUISITE ( no better word ! ) Vatican Museum of Art exhibition
at the Metropolitan Museum in New York City. Those Renaissance paintings
will strike a nerve of the most torpid sensitivity .No doubt they were
inspired by passionate religious belief. It thought occurred to me that
they might simply be IMPOSSIBLE in the modern world -which has only a
pale pretense of piety. We cannot recover the psychology of the past, but
we can at least appreciate it and understand it .
But what I found most touching in the Vatican Exhibition was a
strikingly " modern " ancient Roman statue of a toddler embracing a
goose.
Your editorial today " What makes art 'modern ' ? " made me recall
that particular " masterpiece " . A work a few hundred years old may seem
dated but one 2000 years old " modern " !
I cannot provide even a sophomoric answer to your question. But
it is an interesting question.
But... they say we are as young as we FEEL . Perhaps the same truth
applies to works of art. Will the music of Elvis Presley - " Burning Love "-
for example - ever sound hopelessly dated ?
I'll bet that 2000 years from now a visitor to the American Museum
of Ancient Music, will find Presley's " Burning Love " as MODERN as I
found " Boy and a Goose " .
Comment from R Marshall:
Ron--I enjoyed reading your warm & incisive thoughts on Art & certain
timeless themes found therein--i.e., "Boy With Goose" antient statue.
I'm often struck by the seeming agelessness of certain artistic works,
such as Van Gogh's brilliant impressionistic paintings. The theme may
often seem dated, capturing the agrarian fields of long ago France & the
simple peasants who laboured in them, but the the vibrant colours &
texture of his paintings make them seem too full of life to ever be
dismissed as outmoded passe. I was thinking just the other day how
timeless James Dean seems. I've always felt that way about him, of
course, but what strikes me quite profoundly is how timeless he seems
the more time passes by!
No wonder reactionaries fear & loath the Arts! So "subversive" in its
affirmation of LIFE & FREEDOM! While Art lifts the spirit the
reactionary feeds on the destruction of others spirits--the essence of
evil. That Boy With Goose statue you wrote so warmly about--that touched
you so deeply & moves you still--will endure long after cranks,
megalomaniacs & egotistical buffoons have withered away on the vine &
been long forgotten. I've always seen you as an artist--one who, as JFK
once spoke of the role of the true artist in society-- "remains true to
himself & lets the chips fall where they may."
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Ron