Entertaining pageant misses some golden opportunities
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BOBBIE ALLEN
When an artist paints a self-portrait, one of the most puzzling
problems the viewer confronts is its audience. Imagine the situation
of its creation. The painter sits for long hours -- really long hours
-- in front of a mirror, self-interpreting. Very often, the eyes of
the painter stare directly at the viewer. But the original “viewer”
is the painter, of course; so who is he/she looking at? And what was
the painter trying to say?
I was thrilled when I heard the theme of this year’s Pageant of
the Masters was “Portrait of the Artist.” So many possibilities.
There were Salvator Rosa’s many portraits of himself as different
characters -- his “Self Portrait as a Philosopher” bears the ironic
logo (in Latin), “Be silent, unless your speech be better than
silence.”
There was the “Stanza della Segnatura” at the Vatican, done by
Raphael, with a sulking Michelangelo in the foreground (among many
others), and a wide-eyed but wise self-portrait of the very young
artist, giving you a knowing glance: He seems to be saying to us,
“Here I am, the painter himself, standing behind my work while you
admire it.”
Michelangelo himself painted his own portrait as the flayed,
drooping skin of a sinner in the Sistine Chapel’s “Last Judgment.”
Wouldn’t that have been an interesting challenge? Even straying a bit
from the theme, Giuseppe Archimboldo did a “Head of Herod” comprising
nude human bodies. What “ooohs” and “aaahs” would have come from the
crowd at the revelation of that one!
Perhaps the limitations of the pageant prevented such choices. Its
use of live models -- the very thing that defines its unique appeal
-- means the paintings in the performance must involve a large enough
composition that an arena full of people can see the thing clearly. A
waist-up self-portrait like Rosa’s wouldn’t work. And something like
Raphael’s Rooms might have involved too many people, since the
pageant seems to limit itself to depicting only the entire work, not
just a detail.
So the pageant this year instead began with a mild and sweet
premise, sung by a wholesome-looking young man at the start of the
performance, that “all paintings are self-portraits.” This seems, in
light of all of the fascinating self-depictions in the history of
art, an unfortunately misdirected start.
It was also puzzling, and got progressively more puzzling as the
performance progressed. Initially, I merely shrugged. The
presentation of Remington’s bronze of galloping horsemen, “Coming
Through the Rye,” was indeed impressive. But what does this reveal
about the artist? You had to reach back to that opening number and
its claim that all art is “essentially a mirror,” listen to the
narrator’s voice telling us it was Remington’s desire to preserve the
Old West, to see this as a portrait.
Things got even more flimsy as the pageant depicted portraits of
other figures. Two lovely bronzes of the great dancers Nijinsky and
Rubenstein segued us into a flashy reenactment of the first
performance of Scheherazade. It took enormous chutzpah to reproduce
that staging, since Vaslav Nijinsky was the greatest dancer of the
20th century, a modernist of stunning grace. And why choose
Scheherazade? Why not something more personally revealing of the
artist himself? Why not “Afternoon of a Faun,” which Nijinsky himself
choreographed?
The same held true for the crowd-pleasing movie poster segment.
Certainly, the film noir theme was cute, Gilda and The Letter in
particular. But an additional musical performance of a torch song
just seemed unnecessary. Perhaps I’m a pageant purist. But why not do
Hitchcock, a director who famously depicted himself in his films, and
make the posters relevant to the theme? How, I kept asking myself, is
this a “Portrait of the Artist?”
The exceptions to this question come in the second act. English
Pop artist David Hockney’s Portrait of an Artist, with its witty
juxtaposition, slickness and nature. Hockney’s lover and protege,
standing in a bold Miami Vice-style red jacket and white pants,
glances down at a swimmer under the water in a chlorine-blue pool.
The choice showed intelligence -- Hockney loves painting pools,
playing off the contrast of their prominence in the California desert
environment. Its title riffed on the theme, since the artist
portrayed was trained by the painter. And it was fascinating to see a
live figure conveying the sense of being under water. It was fun to
see.
So was “Radioactive Cats,” based on a cibachrome print of an
installation by Sandy Skoglund. This was fascinating, since the
original used live models (but not live cats). But if we’re going to
play with performance art, with live installations, why not choose
from the many live installations where performance artists have
actually incorporated themselves into the installation? (The
possibilities are endless here -- postmodern artists love to play
with conventions of the self-portrait.)
The final pieces continued to miss the mark. Leonardo was said to
have painted himself as a woman in “La Giaconda,” and there are many
self-portraits in his legacy. Instead, we have the “Madonna of the
Rocks,” which seems to have been chosen merely because of its
presence in Dan Brown’s conspiracy novel.
What makes the Pageant of the Masters so amazing is bringing art
to life on many levels simultaneously. Its title and theme are
shorthand to accomplishing this goal. James Joyce titled his first
novel “A Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man” ironically. The title
was both true and false, since the artist depicted is both Joyce and
his alter ego, Stephen Daedelus. Joyce knew that the mirror the
artist gazes into never tells the truth pure and simple, and that is
the great complexity of art.
I walked away from this year’s Pageant of the Masters wishing I
had seen more of that complexity and intelligence and feeling, less
like I had been merely entertained.
* BOBBIE ALLEN is a poet and writer who has taught art theory and
criticism.
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