The draw of the Pageant
- Share via
AT THE GALLERIES
Is the Pageant of the Masters art, or merely an attraction? There is
no doubt that the Pageant defies description and category. Novelty
(if you can call 70 years of performances “novel”) is often dismissed
as kitsch or common, yet the art world values things rich and rare.
Sitting in the audience for this year’s Pageant, “Seasons,” I had to
ask myself as a critic, why does it fill us with wonder?
At one point, early in the production, the narrator, Skip Conover,
tells us the goal of each tableau is to “replicate the impression” of
the original. Of course, this is not the goal of the Pageant. The
goal is to transmute the solitary experience of looking at a painting
into a communal spectacle, far beyond what the original could
possibly accomplish. It expands the “impression” of art out of the
zone of familiar artistic experience. In short, the Pageant of the
Masters is performance art.
As the audience around me listened to the soothing voice of
Conover explain the Pageant, they watched the dimly lighted
stagehands and performers set up John Whetten Ehninger’s 1867
painting, “October.” Ehninger is not exactly an old master, but in
the creative vision of the Pageant, “October” becomes something else,
something astonishing. The spectators give sound to their emotions
with “whoas” and “wows” as the correct lighting hits the stage, the
music strikes and suddenly something that we know is
three-dimensional becomes flat, and takes on the patina and range of
tones only aged oils on canvas possess.
The 19th-Century poet and critic S.T. Coleridge described this
phenomenon perfectly: it is a “semblance of truth” granted
temporarily to “shadows of imagination” he called “the willing
suspension of disbelief for the moment, which constitutes poetic
faith.” We want to be deceived.
Coleridge was speaking of the peculiar instant when you loose your
sense of self when reading or watching a play (now, the phrase is
often applied to film). But as the lights come up on the familiar and
cliche Currier and Ives litho, “The Road-Winter” -- that Christmas
card image of a Victorian couple on a sled pulled by lithe gray
horses through the snow -- we gasp. You forget your familiarity with
the image, listen to the music, and see the transfixed figures on the
stage with astonishment.
This, Coleridge was pointing out, is an act of imagination. To
accomplish such a leap requires great skill on the part of the
artist. In this case, we’re not talking about Currier and Ives; the
“artist” is the mass of volunteers, skilled painters, and production
people that design and execute the moment on the stage.
I have said before that the Pageant of the Masters is
indescribable. It really must be experienced. That is also true of
great art. If I detailed for you the majesty and pathos in da Vinci’s
“The Last Supper,” it would not replicate the power of the fresco as
you see it on the wall.
And the Pageant in part can magnify the experience of art, even if
(perhaps especially if) the original is mediocre and tired (as in the
case of John Falter and Norman Rockwell).
This suspension of disbelief gets even more astounding when the
Pageant takes on the decorative arts. It’s somewhat disconcerting
when the Art Nouveau bronze lamps of Charles Jonchery and Louis
Chadon appear magnified on the stage. Nouveau idealized and stylized
the female figure into something organic and impossibly plant-like.
But here, the mind knows, are real women in body make-up. But they
aren’t; they are lamps.
When four porcelain figurines in eighteenth-century dress appear
above the stage, the audience takes a quick breath; not because they
are giant porcelain figurines, but because we know they are not. Yet
they bear the shine of glazed blues, reds, and yellows familiar to
porcelain.
It is that range of experience in art that really makes the
Pageant so amazing. The four Japanese woodblock prints by Torii
Kiyonaga reproduce the shadowless bold color and compactness of the
original “Four Scenes from the Floating World.” The unknown sculptors
who cast the two bronzes of Shiva in the Pageant, as the cosmic
dancer destroying time, were attempting to capture the wild movements
of his dance. Yet here are the artists of the Pageant, doing
everything possible to capture the stillness of the sculpture.
But I believe the Pageant is best when it manages to reproduce not
just the visual qualities of the original (as it does so well with
popular subjects, like John Van Hamersveld’s “The Endless Summer,”
the famous day-glow lithograph for the movie), but the emotive
qualities as well. This happens when the narrative, the music, the
lighting, the right match of model and subject all dovetail perfectly
together. The depiction of Edward Hopper’s oil, “Summer Evening,”
floods the air of the amphitheater with sadness and that incredible
emotional void that seems to be in much of Hopper’s work. It’s a
discomforting feeling of voyeurism in sympathy, where the entire
theater acts as one viewer, filled with the awkwardness and isolation
of the couple on the porch.
In those brief moments during the experience of the Pageant of the
Masters, when the painting “comes to life,” we experience something
akin to dreaming: we live another life. “They have power,” as Byron
said of dream images, “They make us what we are not ... and shake us
with the vision that’s gone by.” Isn’t that what we should demand of
all art?
* BOBBIE ALLEN is a poet and writer who has taught art theory and
criticism. She currently teaches at Saddleback College.
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.