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Cave
Paintings and Christo's "Gates":
Art in Individual Minds and Public Places
EXASPERATED ADDENDUM
of 2/20/2005
Copyright (c) Dianne L. Durante 2004. For permission to
reproduce this essay, email
comments@ForgottenDelights.com .
To see sketches of the proposed The
Gates project, visit
http://www.frenchculture.org/art/events/03christogates.html
or
http://www.the-gates-project.com/
SUBHEAD: Christo’s upcoming The Gates
belongs on a slalom course rather than in New York City’s Central Park,
because it doesn’t fulfill the purpose of art.
In the depths of a cavern thousands of years ago, a
figure laboriously scratched designs of animals and hunters onto a wall.
Even if you stalk your beef at the supermarket, you can still grasp the
ancient artist’s message: that hunting animals was a dangerous business
(the men are tiny compared to the animals), but that having the courage to
hunt them was crucial for survival. Simply because the artist chose to
represent these particular figures in this relationship, the message is
clear.
In the millennia since that drawing, all paintings
and sculptures have conveyed some message about man and the world he lives
in. Even a mediocre work - think of the bronze Seward at Fifth
Avenue and 23rd Street - tells you that this particular man and
his accomplishments were once honored and considered significant.
A great work of art goes far beyond that. It
transforms the artist’s message into an unforgettable image. Such a work
is not merely pretty décor: it gives you a guide to living your life. It
suggests what you should pay attention to, and where you should focus amid
the chaos of impressions that assaults your senses every minute of every
day.
At its best, art can literally help you keep your
goals in sight. A work of visual art condenses a whole view of the world.
You can hold it in your mind as a single, concrete image of what sort of
person you’d like to become: a person with the pride of Michelangelo’s
David, or the elegance of Madame Recamier. You can use it to
recall the sort of world you want to live in: the peace of a Constable
landscape, the bustle and energy of Canaletto’s Venice, the drama of a
Delacroix. “Since man lives by reshaping his physical background to serve
his purpose,” wrote Ayn Rand, “since he must first define and then create
his values – a rational man needs a concretized projection of these
values, an image in whose likeness he will re-shape the world and himself.
Art gives him that image.”
Bearing that in mind, consider husband-and-wife team
Christo and Jeanne-Claude’s The Gates. New York City officials have
granted permission for The Gates to stand in Central Park for 16
days, beginning February 12, 2005. According to the website of the
Metropolitan Museum of Art (where a 3-month exhibition devoted to the
project will open in April 2004), The Gates “will consist of 7,500
saffron-colored gates placed at 10- to 15-foot intervals throughout 23
miles of pedestrian walkways.” Each gate will be 16 feet high, with 8 feet
of fabric suspended from the crossbar.
What message will The Gates convey? None at
all. If you examine every fiber of the million square feet of fabric, you
won’t be a nanometer closer to knowing what sort of person you’d like to
be, what you should focus on, what sort of world you’d like to live in.
Prominent art historians and critics at the Whitney, the Museum of Modern
Art and The New York Times haven’t even tried to proclaim any
meaning in The Gates. They merely assert that it will draw
attention to Central Park. “It might work and it’s not permanent, so why
not give it a shot?” asked the publisher of the New York Observer.
The twenty-year controversy over whether to allow
The Gates to be erected in Central Park was driven largely by fears of
the work’s environmental impact. In fact, there’s a much more basic reason
for rejecting the project: the lack of any impact on the minds of
those seeing it. If it conveys no message, it isn’t art. And if it isn’t
art, why allow it in the Park? We might just as well grant permission to
The Picket Fences or The Discarded Taxi-Bumpers.
If you want to enjoy art in Central Park, do your
best to avoid Christo’s giant slalom poles. Instead, seek out the dozens
of figurative sculptures scattered through the Park, from Duke
Ellington to the Delacorte Clock, from the Maine Monument
to Samuel Morse, from Still Hunt to the Untermeyer
Fountain. Like genuine works of art ever since the caveman’s time,
these have the potential to speak to you - to inspire, provoke and amuse
you – in a way that Christo’s Gates never will.
An Exasperated Addendum
to those who’ve sent me angry and indignant emails about this essay
February 20, 2005
I've gotten dozens of
responses to this essay. Many were unsubstantiated ad hominem
attacks: "You’re so narrow-minded!" Others were emotional rants, and still
others were appeals to authority: "Who are you to disagree with Famous
People!" None of them affected my opinion of the Gates. Here's why.
Respect for reality and for
other peoples' minds requires that you attach specific meanings to words,
rather than spewing out what you kind-of sort-of more-or-less think you
mean. You will have a problem with reality if you call a tiger a pussycat.
You will have a problem with your neighbor if you have the government
confiscate his land for your building by claiming it's for "the public
good." And you will eventually have a problem if you call a grandstanding
boondoggle such as the Gates "art."
Art has a nature and a
definition. It isn’t "whatever any self-proclaimed artist produces" – else
you and I could both be turning out art while watching CSI. It
isn’t "whatever a museum curator or gallery owner decrees to be art" –
otherwise the Ancient Greeks and the Renaissance Italians wouldn’t have
had any art at all, poor dears. Art isn't "anything I find pretty or
spectacular," either - if it were, lilac bushes and giant inflatable
Spiderman balloons would be art.
To repeat what I said
above: What separates visual art from other forms of human endeavor is
that its creator, by his choice of subject and his emphasis in presenting
it, conveys a message to viewers. He says, in an image, "Pay attention:
this is important about man or the world." Michelangelo’s 500-year-old
David makes a statement about what man can and ought to be that we can
still grasp and react to. The Gates says nothing. It’s as
"artistic" as my bedroom curtains.
I don't normally get
wrought up about curtains (indoors or out). I wouldn’t even bother to
discuss the Gates, if it had been erected, for instance, on a
private farm in upstate New York. But since it's taken over a
magnificently designed public space where many of us can't avoid it
without serious inconvenience, it annoys me quite a lot. Letting it pass
for art also sets a precedent for allowing other such gargantuan objects
in the Park, and eventually having the government (which means me and you)
pay for them. A proper definition of art would be a big step toward
preventing that. (For a proper definition, read Ayn Rand's The Romantic
Manifesto.)
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