Tuesday, March 31, 2015

Art As Therapy: Georges Seurat, The Bathers (1883-4)

It is easy to be seduced by the surface of this painting. The flickering, pearly light glows on the skin of each figure. It diffuses a pleasant glow on everything as if the world radiated rather than reflected light.

There are smokestacks in the background. One of them (center) is dissusing smoke high into the air. Its darker blue seems to diffuse innocuously into the general mist of the foreground.

The river has many bathers on its modest, grassy suburban banks and beaches. This is urbanized nature, thanks in part to the not-so-distant smokestacks. The bathers have come to the river for a temporary break. The swimmers wear their underwear, or their swimsuits under their clothes, to save time. Others sit or lie on the bank in their summer suits. This does not seem to be a day at the beach but more likely a break in the work day. Ordinary life taps the bathers in their shoulders. They respond to this tapping in various ways.

The three young bathers in the foreground may have come here together. They are associated by their proximity in the composition and the bold reds and golds of their hair and bathing clothes. The boy sitting on the bank with his feet in the water seems to be the eldest. He slouches and looks out at the water from beneath shaggy ginger bangs. His flat hair suggests that he wore his hat to the beach, then removed it. If he notices the younger boy making farting noises with his hands and mouth directly in front of him, he doesn't let on. The eldest boy is stealing time from encroaching pressures and responsibilities, which might include looking after his younger companions. He no longer feels young enough to make impish farting noises or stare down wonderingly into the water (as the third, possibly youngest bather does). His visit to the river is desultory. He doesn't want to remember being that carefree or consider that loss.

But this teenaged bather is not the only one sitting in solitude on this busy beach at mid-day. The children are immersed in their own separate worlds of play, and the adults are in various states of solitary repose. One exception is the man whose proximity with his dog suggests intimacy. In this painting, human socializing is a spectator sport enacted by others across the water. Figures on skiffs or sailboats might be interacting, but the figures closest to us are not. Several of our sunbathers are doing similar things by lying or sitting and looking at the water; but even that focus is not unanimous among the bathers. One of them, in the background, lies on his stomach facing away from the river.

In a crowded place, peaceful solitude is an art. These are Parisians, people who know how to live and make the most of a meagre mid-day break. The adult figures in the painting (stacked vertically along our left) have learned that art. They have cultivated this repose over generations.

The casual triangle formed by the figures from top left to bottom right gives the scene remarkable stability and stillness. It is always the quiet stillness of midsummer noon in this painting. Modernity is looming, but humans can cultivate themselves in Nature's generosity, perhaps enough to figure out what to do about those smokestacks.

Sunday, March 29, 2015

Disaster Porn and the Divine: Matt Bahen's Pale Heaven and Sometimes Comes the Mother, Sometimes the Wolf




"Men should be caressed or else annihilated," said Machiavelli in his advice to a Medici prince. In the two paintings before us, pale sunlight intermittently caresses and blasts out the rich textures of ruined interiors. Viewed from across a room -- in this case, the daycare-style dungeon that is the cafeteria at the Art Gallery of Ontario, where I drink coffee from a paper cup -- these works by Matt Bahen resemble, at first, my favourite photographic subject: urban exploration of grand, ashen ruins such as Detroit, which happens to be my birthplace. Up close, however, the surfaces of the canvas dissolve and coalesce into luscious, pearly impasto. The subtle vibrations of palest greens and pinks illuminate these places, giving way to deep and rich browns spawned in rusted metal, blown leaves, and dried blood.  Here, everything -- exterior and interior; stone, brick, mortar, metal; plaster, wood, paint, fabric -- gives way in its own time to light, water, and wind, which break it down to its elements. From the niches of these haunted, imagined walls, maybe saints used to watch over the proceedings; but the saints left long before this scene. And what are we watching?

On each canvas, in the transept of each space, under what was once the dome but now resembles a Roman amphitheatre, two dogs (escapees from baroque paintings?) grapple, playing or fighting, on hind legs. No longer sworn to human masters, Fido has found and joined his own pack. What brought this pair of mutts here? If they are career fighting dogs, we viewers are the sole audience. No, watched or not, they are just two post-apocalyptic strays, whiling away the days (their play decidedly more menacing and combative in one of the panels) under the shattered dome of church or sky itself.

A fable unfolds.  As players or fighters, the dogs in this story make uncomfortable bipeds. They need each other to stand; but when they stand, they fight. Forgotten and forsaken, only they can end this conflict or game because the world that used to feed and house them is in ruins. Like the two paintings, the dogs are no matching set, but an incomplete triptych. The missing panel has to come from the mind and spirit of the viewer.

What could make everything "go to the dogs" so spectacularly? Well, for one thing, turning our backs on people or places or ideas that need us. When we abandon something entrusted to our care, it starves (get a load of the countable ribs on those dogs), then eventually dies. Machiavelli would have marveled at such economy of scale. He envisioned active, energetic cruelty; our modern masters have economized,  elevated neglect to the new torture, transformed failure to "caress" into the new annihilation. These lost, scavenging canine drifters remind us that Tinker Bell isn't the only casualty of an abandoned idea. American rust-belt cities such as Detroit and Pittsburgh and Buffalo are the Tinker Bells of this century. They are also canaries in the coal mines in which most of us work, economies that can --  have, will -- cut and run, leaving survivors to dig their own way back to the surface or not, according to their lights. And what will await the lucky survivors on that surface? Dazzling light, gorgeous ruins, and starving dogs. When shared by only a few, gentrification affords no renaissance. 

Naturally, everyone's perception of these or any works is as unique as DNA. Through the lens of faith rather than economics, an atheist, an agnostic, and a believer are three possible if over-simplified perspectives for viewing this diptych. 

In many ways, the atheist and the believer may have more in common with each other when looking at these works than they have with the agnostic. The hard-line faithless and faithful have definite, if opposing, perspectives. After all, one must take a position; failure to commit is nihilistic. Just as the decay of a neglected building annihilates interior and exterior, so agnosticism deconstructs the commitment to the divine and secular alike. What more are we without our convictions than dogs fighting in a ruined church?

Are humans wholly compatible with uninterrupted divine faith or atheism, or rather are faith and doubt natural iterations in our search for meaning? Holy texts call out most compellingly as the voices of questioners, their struggles dominating the rising action of story after story. These ancient texts represent most of our lives as states of existential flux. For the elect, the moment of agape is the climax or the punch-line.

Every ruined structure alludes to the divine. For me and many fellow urban explorers, ruined or abandoned spaces are more than spectacular windows on the grotesque; they are grand manifestations of the memento mori tradition. Sooner or later, entropy opens every building up to the heavens (the "vertical" impulse of the imagination, according to Northrop Frye), as well as sideways along the ground (the daily world of the "horizontal" in Frye's mandala). All public buildings, secular or divine, store in their bones the joys and punishments of the cathedral; in turn, the vaults of these great buildings are monuments to the forest canopy.

The idea that nature is a church smacks of soft-minded escapism. On its surface, the generic spirituality of the agnostic abandons the rigours of boredom , social anxiety, and sincere inquiry in favour of the picturesque. Perhaps the resentment from both polarities -- the devout and the denier -- comes from envy, or the suspicion that one has paid for something that was free all along.

In fact, this envy is misguided. Like most stories of the Bible, the middle road of agnosticism is a gruelling, often humiliating journey. The competent agnostic must test his or her ideas daily. Like Sartre's existentialism, agnosticism is a humanism, a rigorous examination of conscience. Moreover, the reward of certainty is unavailable to the agnostic. From this position, the apostolic and atheistic attitudes look like easy fixes. 

The world needs keepers of its grand memory to assess its present and project its future, and chiaroscuro seems to be the medium most fit to express essential truths. Black and white thinking has brought us to the edge of ruin. So these two paintings remind skeptics like me to stand firm alongside believers and unbelievers alike, readying ourselves for the day when the masters of these places will go out for cigarettes,  never to return; when hand-claps, too faint and too late, will fail to revive us. Meanwhile, our vocation is the purgatorial agony of seeing through a glass, darkly. This deeply personal, ever-changing, unformed vision which we carry inside us is the final panel of Bahen's generous triptych. 

I would love to liberate these paintings from their current home. Alas, I have the leisure to see them but not the means to buy them. In case you do, I have included the artist's link (without his prior approval). At very least, treat yourself to their luscious, playful, and jarring splendour over a quick joe in the AGO basement, where you can enjoy them without paying the price of gallery admission. 


Curious about the ways that pre-digital people write essays? See images of my agony below. I'm on the ninth draft. Maybe ten's a charm.











Sunday, October 5, 2014

Art As Therapy: Van Gogh, The Mulberry Tree in Autumn. October 1889.
There it is, smack-dab in the centre, all tentacles of fire. It seems to radiate light. Like most other objects in the painting, its leaves are moving, curling their fists against the soaring winds. Even the lowest-lying surface of the foreground (the field, a thick, creamy carpet) is buffeted by the ever-present wind. Their very existence in this setting is an exhilerating struggle.
This motion celebrates the Copernican universe; we spin and cling to the Earth. But wait. Is the tree reacting to the wind or creating it? The child-mind has painted the sky to soar and radiate from the tree itself. Who's got the time or patience to paint the sky first? BAM! CRASH! The tree is a caption at the climax of a comic strip.
The paint in the foreground is thick. This yellow impasto is generous; it is a harvest, coming your way at the speed of this spinning planet.
Only the densely green stands of trees near the horizon defy the laws of wind and light with stubborn immobility. They draw the eye like pyramids, landmarks of dark possibilities, places that we're aware of even as we rejoice in this ultimate capture of sunlight. There will always be time for darkness, they seem to say. It's just a short walk.
Resting up against the tree's curving trunk is the only evidence of human society (also the closest to a rectilinear rendering) in the painting: a storage box. After all, a farmer's field is a place of work, and autumn means that there is work to be done. That box and the dark forests are the only solid objects on the exploding surface of the canvas; thus, the anchors of the painting, the ideas that keep it from spinning into the realm of fantasy, are toil and darkness. The essence of all these objects, in motion or stasis, is their steadfastness. Persistently immovable or tirelessly moving, they persevere.
The little orange tree in the middle-ground taps us on the shoulder; reminds us of wonders -- some light-filled and fiery, others risky and scary -- that await us if we just keep walking.

Sunday, August 31, 2014

Art As Therapy: Georges Seurat, The Bathers, (1883-4)


The light in this painting is pearly. This pearly light glows on the skin of the subjects and flickers on the surface. It diffuses a pleasant glow on everything as if the world radiated rather than reflected light.

There are smokestacks in the background. One of them (center) is diffusing smoke high into the air. Its darker blue seems to diffuse innocuously into the general mist of the foreground.

The river has many bathers on its modest, grassy banks and beaches. This is urbanized nature, thanks in part to the not-so-distant smokestacks. The bathers have come to the river for a temporary break. The swimmers wear their underwear, or their swimsuits under their clothes, to save time. Others sit or lie on the bank in their summer suits.

This does not seem to be a day at the beach but more likely a break in the work day. Ordinary life taps the bathers in their shoulders. They respond to this tapping in various ways.

The three young bathers in the foreground may have come here together. They are associated by their proximity in the composition and the bold reds and golds of their hair and bathing clothes. The boy sitting on the bank with his feet in the water seems to be the eldest. He slouches and looks out at the water from beneath shaggy ginger bangs. His flat hair suggests that he wore his hat to the beach, then removed it. If he notices the younger boy making farting noises with his hands and mouth directly in front of him, he doesn't let on. The eldest boy is stealing time from encroaching pressures and responsibilities, which might include looking after his younger companions. He no longer feels young enough to make impish farting noises or stare down wonderingly into the water (as the third, possibly youngest bather does). His visit to the river is desultory. He doesn't want to remember being that carefree or consider that loss.
But this teenaged bather is not the only one sitting in solitude on this busy beach at mid-day. The children are immersed in their own separate worlds of play, and the adults are in various states of solitary repose. One exception is the man whose proximity with his dog suggests intimacy. In this painting, human socializing is a spectator sport enacted by others across the water. Figures on skiffs or sailboats might be interacting, but the figures closest to us are not. Several of our sunbathers are doing similar things by lying or sitting and looking at the water; but even that focus is not unanimous among the bathers. One of them, in the background, lies on his stomach facing away from the river.

In a crowded place, peaceful solitude is an art. These are Parisians, people who know how to live and make the most of a meagre mid-day break. The adult figures in the painting (stacked vertically along our left) have learned that art. They have cultivated this repose over generations.

The casual triangle formed by the figures from top left to bottom right gives the scene remarkable stability and stillness. It is always the quiet stillness of midsummer noon in this painting. Modernity is looming, but humans can cultivate themselves in Nature's generosity, perhaps enough to figure out what to do about those smokestacks.

Friday, June 6, 2014

Tim Hudak Wants Your Job

Hey, why do I keep seeing you in this aisle of the store? Do you work here or something? Sorry. We used to joke like that before Tim Hudak wanted your job.
     But what will he do with it? Turn it into something that gets extruded from a machine? Something nasty and cheap, like the mush that becomes Chicken McNuggets and weaves its curiously addictive odour among the off-gassing of better Wal-marts?
     After all, your job can get a lot nastier and cheaper than it is. Really, Hudak is just taking a pre-existing austerity plan to its absurd, dystopian conclusion. Already discrepancies are growing between you and your colleagues  because of a rebate on sick days for some people. You haven't used your quota of sick days; therefore, you're elegible for a rebate on one of your unpaid days. Meanwhile, a colleague, who, through no personal wrongdoing, has been ill this year -- not one of those "imaginary" psychiatric disorders that we so-called "liberals" complain about; rather, the kind of physical ailment whose symptoms include blood-filled cysts that cause nebulae of agony when they explode inside the abdominal cavity -- will earn a day's less pay than you. Arguably a sick person might need that day's pay more than you do to cover incidental, non-refundable expenses that arise from illness: non-prescription meds and supplies as well as services to keep lives running smoothly when we can't cook or clean or get around as effectively as we would when we are well. But not to worry; under Hudak's system, that person, who happens to be an athlete, can make it up with "merit pay" and get ahead of you in this free-market world of education.
     Anyway, Hudak isn't even in power yet; but thanks to low voter turn-out, that will be easy. Once he makes your job an essential service and outlaws your union (following the Wisconsin model, which he has been researching), he intends to hire you back for half your pay. In no time,  public education will become like a smooth-running chain of Wal-mart stores, the most relevant experience which he brings to the field. Like most Wal-mart employees, you've probably already finished paying for your spacious house and reliable car, unless you've been slacking off; after all, we reap what we sow. And in order to sow, you will need special skills that have only an arbitrary relationship to good pedagogy.
     Unless you play sports or a musical instrument or teach acting, you'll have a tough time qualifying for merit pay. And since we'll all be striving for that minimum 90 percent on standardized tests, it's probably best to teach from manuals and websites that extrude unit plans like bags of interesting-shaped pasta. After all, teaching isn't an art, right?
     So with half your pay, merit pay would sure come in handy if you could get it in your spare time. (By the way, those long hours that you work will only get longer because classes will get bigger once many of us are fired.) As for those of us with heavy marking loads, well, there's no merit in that work. Better take that barista course while you can still afford it. Maybe you can get much-needed free coffees during your shifts; after all, every little resource counts.
     Speaking of resources, let's talk about energy: yours.  Since you will be working longer (not counting your part-time job) and getting crankier from marking those bigger classes, you might have to budget for a cheap divorce or settle for more of a solitary life than you'd envisioned. Your early hours have never suited most other adults, but your longer work will make relationships even more difficult to start or sustain.  Oh, and if your productivity flags from the stress of personal loss or solitude, you'll probably get fired. After all, no one is irreplaceable.
      So Hudak gets your job back for a worthier person to do it. Society loses you but gains the next "enthusiastic, quality teacher", at least until that  one wears out and joins you in the line of unemployed to the crack of doom.
     However, losing your job shouldn't matter to you: you're middle class, right? And middle class means that you own a vineyard or something and go to work just to beef up your investments. If you actually had to work to pay your bills, you'd be working class, but that can't be true. You've been told all your adult life that you're  a middle class professional. I'm sure you'll be fine.
     What, are you still standing there? Don't you have shelves to stock or something? No, wait. That's next year. Better study up!