"Art" by Yasmina Reza, translated by Christopher Hampton, directed by Emilie Whelan
I saw this play in London in 1998, a couple years into the run of the first English-language production (the original is in French). I thought it'd be worth seeing again, especially after Kosman gave it a good review (halfway down this page). This was by Shotgun Players, a Berkeley troupe whom I once saw in a production of Hamlet in which the actors pull slips of paper out of a hat (actually Yorick's skull) at the beginning of each performance to see who'll play which part.
Nothing so avant-garde this time. "Art" was well-performed, but I didn't like this production as well as I did the London one. This was mostly because the director took the emphasis away from one theme - what is art, what makes it valuable and how do we know what we like? - and on to another, the nature of male friendship, a depiction completely alien to anything in my experience of friendship, but whatever.
In this play, a moderately successful man drops a large load of money on buying a painting by a fashionable modern artist and shows it off to his two closest friends. The painting is pure white, supposedly with features and highlights that only the connoisseur can see. One of the friends is offended, less by what he sees as the artistic worthlessness of the painting than by what it says about his friend's taste. The other tries to be agreeable to both of them in turn.
The third, who is the youngest and least well-off, illustrates his haplessness with a long monologue about being caught in the middle of an argument between his fiancée and his mother over the wording of the wedding invitation. The London performer (I no longer remember who was in the show at the time I saw it, sorry) delivered this as an evenly-paced steadily rising hysteria. This one did it in rising and falling outbursts. He did, however, at one point deliver a golden piece of advice I didn't remember from the previous showing. He said, "'Calm down' is the worst thing you could say to somebody who's lost their calm." And this is true. It will anger them further because it shows you don't care what they're angry about, you just want to exert control over them.
Anyway, the art side of it interests me. Are there actually painters who produce blank monochromatic paintings that are considered great art? Yes there are. I've been to this display of fourteen featureless black paintings and sat there for a few minutes pretending to be moved by it. I have never felt more ripped off by an art museum, despite the fact that there is no admission charge.
And do their defenders actually make the desperate argument of pointing to minute variations in the texture as where the value of the art lies? Yes they do and my thoughts on the value of modernist art are there. It's also my answer to the question the painting's owner asks his critic: how can someone who doesn't claim any expertise in the subject judge the work? The answer is that if it has any value, any viewer should be able to pick that up. Crikes, why do people with no technical training in music whatever listen to symphonies? They must be getting something valuable out of the aesthetic experience or else there would be no point in performing for them.
All Rothko isn't featureless and black, though certainly his work isn't for everyone. I like both minimalist music and art. I had problems with ART, which I saw a couple of weeks ago, but none of them had to do with the potential value of an all-white canvas.
ReplyDeletePeople without technical expertise listen to and judge musical works all the time and sure, they get something out of the aesthetic experience of hearing them. With experience and technical expertise, you can be more specific and have a better ability to back up those judgments. To take an obvious example, "Carmina Burana" is certainly popular, but most professional critics know what the musical and other issues are with it.
True, not all Rothko is featureless and black, though this is. Some is featureless and red.
DeleteThe point of what I was saying is that, if a musical (or other) work really is great, some of that value will seep through even to untutored listeners. And sometimes, the untutored can see the greatness in a work which the professional critics have let their critical radar, attuned to different kinds of work, blind themselves to the value of. I've seen that in criticism of Tolkien, of Glass and Gorecki, as well as of ...
I'm in DC right now and went to the National Gallery yesterday. There is a room there containing only all-white paintings, and they are quite different from one another!
ReplyDelete