Daniel and the Lion's Den was
another story he chose to paint, but without the dramatic action and
overexaggerated intensity. Rubens'
painting of Daniel in the Lion's Den showed quite a different scene, didn't
it? Here the artist has presented Daniel
as a calm and humble servant of his Lord and Savior; the lions, as tranquil
cats. The setting is a barren,
dungeon-like chamber, enclosed and withdrawn from the light of day except for
the center illumination hitting the floor and the crossed arms of the captive
Israelite youth. Daniel does not appear
afraid, and the lions don't look fearsome—because in the story, God caused the
lions' mouths to remain shut for the duration of the night when Daniel was
thrown into the otherwise deadly pit by King Darius for worshiping the
Israelite God instead of the Babylonian king.
In this artwork Daniel bows his head in faithful submission to his Lord
(contrasting with Rubens' Daniel, who looks up to Heaven with pleading eyes and
clasped, prayerful hands). This painting
is one of quiet and resolute faith in God and His ability to deliver those out
of darkness who put their trust in Him.
Bible stories, as you can see, are painted by Tanner in a humble
light—perhaps for the first time in art history since the Medieval Period. This is to show religious faith as a
personal, humbling experience between the individual and God alone, not a
landmark, earth-shattering phenomenon to be painted on the Sistine Chapel.
Thursday, February 27, 2014
Tuesday, February 25, 2014
Modernism (pt. 7)
A late Realist who appeared on the
art scene near the Turn of the Century was the African American Henry Ossawa
Tanner, whose works took from Modernist and Impressionist art theory to
reinvent biblical traditions for the Modern Era. These works stray far from the Baroque pomp
and circumstance of Renaissance-esque masterworks that glorified religious
saints and martyrs with immense, tapestry-like paintings of epic scenes. His famous painting here retells a well-known
narrative tradition of biblical history: the Annunciation (which is when the
Archangel visited Mary to tell her she was going to give birth to the Messiah).
Painted in 1898, this work takes an
entirely changed perspective on the biblical story. We can cite scores of Northern European
Renaissance works that showcase the Annunciation as a prolific event, something
all-glorious and eye-popping, but here it's a simple, humble girl in a dingy
room being met by an ambiguously drawn light (representative of Gabriel, the
angel). Where are the majestically
spreading clouds, the host of singing angels, and the illustrious Holy Virgin
of those altarpiece paintings which we so fondly remember? Tanner does away with all of the prestige of
Christianity and dares to call faith an act of humility. Here the late Victorian philosophy of
Imperialistic, White-Man's-Burden Christendom is shattered under the pretense
that biblical narratives and parables should be artistically represented in a
light that emphasizes the humility to be attained in the Christian life. Raised by a staunchly religious father who
was himself a Methodist minister, Tanner chose to primarily paint biblical
scenes during the greater part of his career, and it is due to these that he is
most well-known and highly regarded today as an important figure in the
creation of Modern art.
Wednesday, February 19, 2014
Modernism (pt. 6)
One more infamous work by the
artist Édouard Manet which was also featured in the 1863 Salon des refusés is his painting titled Olympia.
This is a painting of a prostitute,
and although we have read about and seen images of nude women posing for male
artists, this is the first outspokenly explicit painting to make such blatant
references to prostitution. In a way,
this is very similar to Titian's Venus of Urbino except that no masking
cover-up (such as Titian's reference to Ancient Roman mythology) exists here to
whitewash or disguise the fact that we're looking at a prostitute. She is naked, lying on a bed of white sheets
and an elaborately stitched blanket, in a room of a whore house. Her jewelry and the flower in her hair
furthermore demonstrate the particular line of work she is in, just so that
there is no doubt, and her present lack of clothing goes to show that she is in
fact currently on call. Once again, we
are meant to feel sympathy for this young woman, as hers is most certainly not
a desirable state for the ordinary Victorian woman to find herself in. Her skin is pale, milky white, and her nude
exposure gives her an air of vulnerability.
The black necklace she wears contrasts with the smooth pallor of her
skin and almost further objectifies her as somebody captive to her system of
life, someone who must be forced to tote herself around in jewelry for the sake
of her trade, like a dog wearing a leash.
She's laid out for everyone to look at her—how exploitative and
unfair! And yet, she is, upon closer
inspection, not so fragile and not so helpless.
Actually, Manet ingeniously turns the viewer into the victim of this
scandal and in turn empowers the woman, as we are about to see.
A maid has entered this private
chamber in the artwork to give the girl a bouquet of flowers (probably a gift
or a payment from her last customer); she's indifferent to them. She is looking somewhere else: at us. Here Manet has broken the fourth wall yet
again; the curtain at the upper left hand corner of the frame has been drawn
back; and we are once more looking at an intentional display created by the
artist, like with The Bar at the Folies-Bergère (which was actually painted
many years after this one). The
implication is that we, the viewer, are her next client. For the upper-class art critics and
connoisseurs of Victorian society, this was not just scandalous; this was
embarrassing.
For the painting, Manet purposely
picked a well-known female model, whom all the other artists would be sure to
recognize, in order to put his male viewers on the spot when attending the
salon with their friends and family.
They would know this woman, and the stereotype of secret sexuality
within the artist-model relationship would immediately conjure up reactions of
awkwardness and discomfort. They had all
seen her and may or may not have had romantic affairs with her while employing
her services as a model. When Manet
paints her as a prostitute, naked and stripped of all of her individualism to
the point of becoming a commodity, he is commenting on the other artists'
objectifying act of using this model for their own art. Here is a vindictively provocative display of
her as she was allegedly being treated by her patron artists: as a whore. The way in which art used people as subjects
was something Manet wanted to alter and, if he could, totally reverse. Here, as I said, the viewer is indicated to
be the woman's next client. By putting the painting's viewers in such an
awkward place, it was almost like the woman was exploiting them now as much as
they had done to her. And look at her
cold, indifferent eyes staring back at us.
The roles have switched; art is now bored at looking at us. She gazes out at her viewers as nothing but
another customer in her day; and as much as artists and viewers alike
wrongfully (according to Manet) exploit her and take advantage of her through
images and objectification on the visual level and sex on the physical level,
she is as able to peer back at us with a power of her own through a defiantly
indifferent, unresponsive stare at the visual level and a brutal indictment on
the subliminal level.
Also—I don't know if you can see it
in this poorly pixilated jpeg image—there's a black cat on the far right of the
painting who's looking out at us, too. The
cat as a feminine feline can perhaps be associated with the scene, since this
is a painting of a woman; but its presence bears further significance than a
mere environmental arrangement or addition to the room, like a piece of the
furniture. It begs to be noticed, what
with its eyes glaring straight out at us and its tail standing on end. The cat at the foot of the bed replaces the
loyal dog, which was a symbol of faithfulness and fidelity (or Fido, in Latin). The replacement is noted; and I'm not going
to go as far as to say the cat is a symbol for Modernism, but it does lend the
painting an even more unsettling tone and an overall sense that Manet's artwork
is associating itself with a different tradition (I don't say a new one;
because this particular symbolism goes back to some of the earliest history
we've looked at).
Ever since ancient times, black
cats have retained a status of symbolic importance throughout Western
culture. If you recall to mind our
discussion of Ancient Egypt (which feels like a long time ago), you remember
that the Egyptians worshipped black cats as representatives of the maternal
goddess Bast. Devotion to this goddess
led people to routinely mummify and bury cats along with the deceased, placing
them with the sarcophagus in the elaborately constructed tombs of the region
with the belief that the spirit of the cat would help guide and protect the
human soul's journey through the afterlife.
The ancient city of Bubastis in the Lower Kingdom was the capital for
this particular cult and was described by Herodotus in his Histories as well as mentioned by the biblical prophet Ezekiel
nearly 150 years earlier in his Old Testament book of prophecy. In Ezekiel 30:17, "Aven" is the
Ancient Egyptian city of Heliopolis, about 50 km south of Bubastis, and in this
verse the prophet accurately foretold, nearly 250 years before the actual
event, of the destruction of the pagan cult "by the sword" (fulfilled
when Alexander the Great conquered this city as part of his Egyptian campaign
in 332B.C.). But cats continued to find significance in
cultural symbolism all over the world.
In Europe they became a symbol of witchcraft,
superstition, and death and were even hunted down as spiritual enemies. It is stipulated that the extermination of
black cats for these superstitious reasons during the Middle Ages played a
primary role in the enlargement of the rat population all across Western Europe
that led to the spread of bubonic plague at the onset of the Black Death. Black cats represented darkness and mystery
during the Renaissance, and they were often depicted in relation to witches, as
magical helpers in their dark arts. The
famous opening scene of Shakespeare's Macbeth
featured such a black cat, Graymalkin, the "spirit familiar" of the
three witches. And the symbolism
continues on to this day, to our celebratory traditions of Halloween, when
black cats become scary omens and bringers of bad luck.
Whether an allusion to Bast,
Graymalkin, or merely the general ill-favored symbol of the animal throughout
time, the black cat in Manet's painting conveys an aura of mysterious
significance that perhaps means to intentionally elude our understanding. That, I believe, is the point of its presence
in this otherwise single-minded work. It
perhaps has nothing to do with the woman (since I don't think Manet is trying
to show that she is a witch or sorceress), but it lends a strange fantasy
quality to the work similar to the nude woman in the artist's painting Le Déjeuner
sur l'herbe (exhibited the same year).
As we recall from that painting, we are entering the fantastical,
irrational, and otherworldly realm of the artist's mind when we look at
art. It is a step from familiar
materialism into the whimsical fancy of the artist's mental construction of a
subject, and therefore it opens up the door to an altogether unlimited
dimension. The otherwise random presence
of a black cat in this already-wild painting further goes to show that the
world of the canvas is wholly not
something with which we are familiar, though we may think we are. This is a world of weird fiction and
subconscious illimitability.
Prostitution, brazen female nudity, scandal, and dark references to
witchcraft and superstition—this painting simply unleashes art as a potential
medium for the embodiment of the Absurd and the incarnation of unbridled
imagination (in all its glory, terror, and mystery).
Tuesday, February 11, 2014
Modernism (pt. 5)
As a flâneur (Baudelaire's term for a person of the crowd and the ideal
Modern artist), Manet spent much of his time in the social circle of the French
night life. This is a part of society
that is usually vibrant with energy and activity, as any partaker in
contemporary night-life crowds can say (some things never change); but the true
Modern artist always keenly observes all aspects of the scene, looking for that
Post-Victorian truth to get him through the challenging and confusing world of
industrialized Modernism. And when
Édouard Manet visited the Parisian nightclub, Folies-Bergère, one evening very
near the artist's relatively brief life, one sees here, in his painting of The
Bar at the Folies-Bergère, a recreation of what he saw and found noteworthy.
This woman, by the way, is no
fiction. Historians have miraculously
been able to track down her name and identity, but Manet painted her here as
just another bartender. The scene is
very up-front. A female server behind a
counter stands in waiting and stares at us, the viewer, as though we were her
next customer. In front of her, on the
countertop is a variety of bottled wines and other libations commonplace enough
for a barroom setting; and we also see a bowl of oranges and a vase of flowers
(again, almost connotative of a still life within the painting, invoking that
idea of the artist's studio once more).
Behind the woman, we see reflected through a mirror the nightclub of the
Folies-Bergère, teeming with life.
Through this window we get the atmospheric feel of the environment, but
Manet has interrupted the gaiety of Paris's night life to focus on this lone
woman to the side of all the action and conversation, a mere server who is otherwise
nameless to us (that is, until now). In
this is implied that Manet has stepped away from the crowd for a moment to
approach this person.
But the woman is a part of the
crowd; that must be keenly grasped. The
artist has singled her out, but the fact that her face appears before a mirror
reflecting all the other faces of the Parisian crowd blends her in with all of
those other people and connects her to the common organism of French
society. (Make sense?) But the artist, as I said, has singled her out
from the multitude and, what's more, centered her in the very middle of the
painting. There is something to be said
of this shift in focus that stands alone as a working of Modernist
thought. A flâneur must be in and among the crowd, after all, to pick out the
singular truths of people, politics, and Modern life—singular truths made
through observations. This painting is
an observation made by Édouard Manet, and it is painted here as a work of art
to convey a truth to the viewer. So,
what are we really looking at?
We are facing the woman directly,
and the woman is looking back at us. The
bar table stands between us; she's got her hands resting on it. In the mirror behind her, we see the counter
reflected, the visitors of the nightclub above (as we've established), and even
the woman's back; but we also see a tall, burly, mustached man in the far-right
reflection of the mirror, someone who is facing the woman and whom the woman
appears to be facing as well. That's
us. Manet has painted the viewer into
the painting. That's pretty insane, if
you think about it. I mean, we have seen
this done before stylistically in the court painting of Las Meninas by Diego
Velázquez and (who could forget) the Arnolfini Wedding Portrait by Jan van
Eyck, but here the interaction between viewer and painted figure seems more
starkly immediate and candid, does it not?
No matter at what distance you are standing, the mirror image on the
right establishes you two as interlocked in direct proximity and, what's more, unblinking
eye contact. We talk about looking at this work of art, but I don't
know what is more strange: that we can look at the representational image of a
woman who is now (like the woman in The Railway) long gone yet, through the
painting, still emblematically as vibrant and colorful as ever; or that she's
looking back at us, too. The moment we
stare at this painting, we enter into it, like the man in the far-right
reflection of the mirror walking up to the counter. Manet pictures art as something inherently
interactive on a visual level which is also interactive on a psychological
level. Ideas, observations, and opinions
are being tossed out to us when we look at paintings, and these radiate off the
canvas like particles of light through the air, showing us the colors of the
artist's mind, so to speak. The
painting, then, is a living entity in the sense that ideas and beliefs can
travel through a crowd like a virus. The
German philosopher Friedrich Nietzsche wrote just four years after this
painting's creation a famous line of his; that "when you look long into an
abyss, the abyss also looks into you."
Now to the woman herself. She is centered, as I said, in the painting,
standing quite tall, and she seems to dominate the scene with a powerful
presence. She fills a clear and very
pronounced vertical line that stretches the height of the canvas, causing our
eyes to scan up and down to get a full view of her. It's almost as if she is as much on display
as the bowl of oranges and the small vase of flowers on the counter—she has a
small cluster of flowers pinned to the front of her dress in a strategic
location. Manet intentionally painted
this serveuse so forthright and kind
of in-your-face as a subliminal statement about what he had noticed as a flâneur in his observations of the
Parisian night life. I think I had
mentioned that prostitution was at an all-time high in Victorian England; it
had also grown to become a public controversy in 19th century
France. An article in The Economist on francophone female prostitution
from July 2012, asserted that "by 1840 there were some 200 brothels in
Paris" alone. The Modernist artist,
the flâneur according to Baudelaire's
standard, would place himself among this crowd and use his observations therein
to inspire his art and give him a sense of the true nature of the Modern
world. Manet paints it as a tragic
case. The woman has her sleeves up,
ready to serve but also ready to be served herself should her next guest pay
her for a sexual favor. Her body stands
up from the counter just as though she were merely another object, like the
wine bottles, awaiting use, and her
stark centeredness within the frame of the painting puts her on display to the
viewer as, essentially, eye candy. The
painting's focal epicenter, we see, is her breasts. But, looking at her face, we see the artist
has painted a sad, dull, tired expression.
Her eyes most distinctly betray her emotion and physical exhaustion. If you ask me, they are some of the most
profound eyes ever to be painted in the history of Western art (like Da Vinci's
Mona Lisa). And he has (Manet) again
painted her with hasty brushstrokes and blurred lines to indicate her always
busy lifestyle and the tireless, thankless, joyless work which forever keeps
her on the go. We are meant to feel
sorry for her. Let's face it, she's
miserable!—but that kind of misery that nevertheless still carries on with the
tasks at hand, though in a kind of fog.
(Have you ever felt that way? I
hope not; but if you have, you know what I'm talking about.) Her eyes are glazed over with a dreamy
absence of mind. She has been brought,
through the endless, melancholy toil of her tragic life, to a place where she appears
emotionally numb and unfeeling, explaining the reason why she stares so desolately
and blankly at us from the painting. She
only now goes through the motions, mechanically, having evidently lost some
part of herself. This profound face
Manet masterfully paints as the face of the Victorian-wasted man (and woman)
whose very soul has been robbed of him by the laborious oppression of the
Modern industrial lifestyle. If this
real-life bartender, whom the artist came across one night while simply hanging
out among the crowd, appears in Manet's painting to have lost her emotional spirit,
then it is a poignant observation on the Modern scene as a whole; that
mankind's own soul, his (and her) very humanity, has been lost in this overshadowing
commercial-industrial metropolis, and that people are themselves at risk of
turning into mere machines. And this is
a theme that has been carried on into today's Postmodern society as well.
Wednesday, February 5, 2014
Modernism (pt. 4)
Manet took liberties in art that
would revolutionize the public notion of what art could do. His rebellious approach to his craft perhaps
reminds us of Goya, who used his own imagination to create scenes of fantasy
and subconscious symbolism; but Goya, a tragically ruined man, made his art
what it was largely on account of the expression of his own pent-up emotion and
psychological angst. Manet did it for
art, for the building of a philosophical ideal about the expression of the
Modern world through art. His paintings,
then, are more subjective, more focused on the conceptual accomplishments which
a work of art can produce. In a way,
this is art for the mind, if that makes sense. Modern painting, starting with Édouard Manet,
takes this shift from the practical and utilitarian to the cerebral, the
creative, and the ideological.
His painting Le Déjeuner sur
l'herbe is just such an example. This
work, famously rejected by salon officials in 1863, was sent into an invented
salon of its own, the Salon des refusés,
a private exhibition for rejects and censored paintings sanctioned by Napoleon
III to allow the French people a chance to see both sides to the contemporary
art world: both the accepted and the unacceptable. Manet's grandiose work was among the most
famous, or infamous, to be exhibited at the rejects' exhibition of 1863, not to
mention one of the single largest artworks to be showcased that year.
This painting is certainly a puzzle. We see a casual luncheon taking place in a
secluded park area. The pastoral setting
is unusual for Manet, who (you will remember) wanted to paint scenes of
everyday urban life among the people.
This work, however, is one of fantasy, imagination, and mystery. Alongside two relaxed men (who are apparently
in conversation) is a woman, stark naked, looking directly back at the
viewer. The men don't seem to notice;
the woman's nudity appears perfectly natural, though nothing sexual is taking
place in the scene. How could they act
so nonchalant in the presence of such immodesty—unless, perhaps, this painting
is not what it seems? Clearly, something
very strange is going on here. In the
backdrop of the landscape, another woman (clothed) is bathing or at least doing
something in a shallow pond; but she is disproportionately drawn to her
distance from the picnic scene on the grass in the foreground. She's too big, and the landscape, therefore,
appears too flat, incongruous, and unrealistic.
For one thing, the natural setting of the scene is not painted very
detailed at all. Quick, shoddy brushwork
and canvas stains suffice to generate a somewhat cartoon-like depiction of
two-dimensional trees as one would be able to pick out among other fake,
constructed set props for a stage play.
After all, we are not in nature here, because we are actually in Manet's
studio. The artist painted this; it is
his creation, come from his own mind, and we as viewers enter into it as an
imaginative journey into the created world of the artist.
Everything about this painting is
mysterious, and it's because this is a work of fantasy. We remember Giorgione's The Concert, which
delved into the world of the pagan mythic tradition, showing two musicians
accompanied by heavenly muses, or spirits, nude and partaking in the scene in
imaginative freedom of expression but probably invisible to the two young
men. Likewise, the nude woman in this
painting here appears to be invisible to the two men, able to sit and exist in
the painting but also crossing the threshold of the artwork and the real world
outside it almost supernaturally through her outward stare. She is not, strictly speaking, real. But nor is the entire painting. That is why the scene can so randomly take
place in a forest that appears flatter than it should with a background that
appears closer than it should. The truth
of this painting is that we are looking at Manet's studio, or rather the
imaginative mind of the artist working within the studio. The biggest hint to this is the sprawled out
still life on the bottom left-hand corner of the work, an intentionally
inserted genre mixture to no doubt further deconstruct the conventions of
painting and of art. Food, a tipped
basket, a loaf of bread, and apparently the nude woman's clothes are laid out
in this kind of still-life fashion, which is also the most obvious genre of art
to be associated with indoor, studio painting.
The natural setting is a fiction, the figures, purely imagined. This dream-like painting invokes a wholly
unrealistic atmosphere to the viewer because, Manet says, art only exists
within the realm of the fantasy, the created, and the invented. This painting came from Manet's head, and he
created it; the possibilities are therefore endless. By looking into the work, we are leaving
reality and entering into a kind of dreamy fantasy that is the direct invention
of the artist, and therefore not liable to be accurate or show things that are
necessarily real or true. To put it
quite simply, this is the beginning of: you can paint whatever you want.
The fact that the woman is staring
out of the painting at us brings to mind a concept that would become
increasingly popular later in metacritical Modernist literature known as
"breaking the fourth wall." It's
a theater term, referring to the setup of the stage. If we imagine a theatrical stage as having
three walls (on either sides and behind) and opening in the front to the
audience, it might be said that the threshold between stage and audience is a
kind of invisible fourth wall, like a window through which the audience gets to
see the action of the play. The reason
we make the distinction is that there does appear, in works of fiction, to be a
"wall" separating the audience from the characters in the play or show;
after all, they are performing a work of fiction, and we are existing in the
present, in reality. As we operate as
onlookers and observers to this separate phenomenon occurring before us, the
actors in the fiction seem to not notice us at all because they are existing
metaphorically in a different dimension: the fictional and non-real. But when an actor turns to address the
audience directly, taking the metaphorical step outside of the fantasy to come
back to reality, to our level, it's as if he or she is tearing down that
invisible window between worlds. That is
why it's called breaking the fourth wall.
Most frequently this can be seen in movies; and it's usually a humorous
device. Whenever a character breaks from
the fiction of the story he or she is in and directly addresses the audience at
their level, that character is breaking the fourth wall. I found a funny example of it from this old
Superman comic, where the fictional hero breaks away from the story which he's
wrapped up in to give his readers a direct message:
It's humorous there, and it often
is today as a technique of Postmodern theater style, but the important thing
which breaking the fourth wall accomplishes is that it destroys the illusion of
fiction and brings the audiences back into the immediate, real world. Manet's nude figure in this painting is
certainly within some kind of weird, imaginative, fantasy dream-world, but she
breaks the fourth wall and causes viewers to feel self-conscious about their
state in the real world. We become aware,
in other words, that we are looking at a painting; and Manet wants this to be
the case. Remember, his quest is one for
truth, and he wants to generate a candid tone of sincerity with the
viewer. His paintings are stylized to
look flat and disproportionate, and often the characters within his scenes
mentally wander away from their own environment by looking off into the
distance—looking at us. This dispels the
illusion, the suspension of disbelief, and in a way it brings the painting
closer to us, by removing itself from itself (if that makes sense).
Frankly, it's hard for me to write
about this work of art because I don't completely understand it myself. The artist is clearly playing with ideas of
fantasy and imaginative construction that contrast with the ordinary, the
everyday, and what we would signify as real or true (such as the two men). I've heard it lectured on, however, as a
satirical indictment on Victorianism—i.e., the naked woman seated unashamed
with the other men, a statement of women's rights; and the pastoral landscape
setting, a kind of Post-Romantic reference to the Greco-Roman mythical
tradition of nature as the setting for the fantastical—and honestly this
painting is so crazy that I suppose you could make a number of good arguments
coming at it from all sides. I don't
know. This painting is Manet's grand
enigma. However, for now let us glean
from it the revolutionary ideal that artists can create from their own free
invention whatever they want to paint, since art is not real to begin with—and
that they can paint these subjects in different ways, using different
techniques other than photorealism.
Manet's paintings appear flat and two-dimensional, as I mentioned
earlier, because he knows he is painting on a flat canvas. Even in this work, the artist doesn't hide it
and allows himself to expand into the fictional, the fantastical, and even the downright
baffling. Doesn't it seem really random
to you? And yet that is the point. At any rate, your guess is as good as
mine. This is one I just don't fully
get.
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