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The quartet of pics here are Reed and me about to play Mozart at an art exhibit which featured my stuff back in July 12, what I refer to as Pollock's big painting at MoMA, a wonderful pic of my mother at the age of maybe 20 sketching on some New York beach (maybe Coney Island, 1937, 38) and a melange of images I put together last year illustrating something about the nature and uses of a "studio." Down not too far below you'll a link to a YouTube recording of viols playing Couperin's Barricades Mysterieuses, which - as Annette Funicello probably said about Frankie Avalon - slays me. Anyway, you know, more Guywords.
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What interests me - which you'll surely
find of a piece with every Guyword you’ve heard or read from me - is the
impenetrable autonomy of each of the arts. Not that we all don't and won't
continue, in some mission to understand our experience of them, to compare
their effects - what else can one do? - but comparisons however useful or inspired
(is my love really like a red red rose?) don't take me far enough. And as you
point out (the difference between time in music and time as implied in a painting,
etc.) the ways we respond to them are fundamentally even biologically
different.
The light bulb went on when I realized,
reading your Frick email, the degree to which visual art did NOT move me is
very like yours. This would appear to argue against something I once held to be
certain: that I mostly perhaps only loved the arts I could do – I experience
them, in fact, as if I had done them. Strike the “as if” in the case of playing
violin: I love the music I can play haptically at least as much as music I only
listen to. I just came upon this regaling recording of the Couperin Barricades Mysterieuses all done by viols. It proceeds
from pizzicati to bowed strings, stage by stage (increasingly less pizz, more
bow), so that by the last variation and the summary repetition of the theme the
music is entirely bowed, and the harmonies esp of the last variation, which do
strike me as more probing and profound than the previous two, make me actually cry.
The mode of playing is at one with the ‘mode’ and meaning of the music – and
the bowed viols give voice to it with such a sense of rightness.
But, again because of your email, another
lightbulb is lit, which is that the experience I was having in response to the
music was so music-specific – I couldn’t imagine feeling anything like it
reading words or seeing images. And now I think again of your having become
over time so much more enlivened by prospects of taking photographs – and
developing a real skill in doing them – and somehow assumed that your response
to all visual stimuli had similarly evolved or changed (not to suggest that
they “had” to) in an equally enlivened way.
But then I read this from you –
“Is this, by the way, the secret meaning of
photography and even painting, the way specific real things suggest unspecified
(though not for that reason unspecific) imagined things, or things
imbued with memory and thought? The trick must be to get your private
suggestions to speak to someone with quite different ones.”
Which makes me think that there is a
different kind of ‘work’ in responding to visual stimuli, especially those more
complex prods to the eye like ‘serious’ photographs, painting, and other visual
arts. (“Serious” as opposed say porno, or a photo of food, or a pretty sunset,
which demand and receive essentially reflex response). It takes more work to
see than it does to hear or smell or taste.
A strange kind of work, too. Viz me & the
big Pollock in MoMA. I was – how old? – late 40s before I felt I “saw” it. Struck
me like an arrow. I was oblivious to it before then. I have walked through the
Frick similarly unmoved, presumably with the same potential to be moved, though who knows what will ignite
it if at all. I may through some imposition of my idea of a Jamesian gestalt enjoy
the dimensional visual etc impact of the Frick house and its timbres (i.e.
what’s in the house, from Vermeer to the ornate late 19th century
chair in the corner), that is apply a narrative to it, which indeed we do. In
fact, as with reading (to make a specious comparison maybe), you have to work
to find a narrative in a painting. Aptitudes (or talents) for a particular mode
of response (yours for reading, for example; mine for the feel in my hand when
I produce another of my baroque curves with a pencil) will probably dispose you
to think kindly and more of whatever ‘art’ you’re good at it. And by the way
get praised for. I think that’s very much in the mix.
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