No wonder he shot himself.
I have this annoying assignment for my Understand Art course in which I have to write, in 3 full pages, double-spaced, my impressions of the Milwaukee Art Museum (both buildings) and one piece within the museum. I have several problems with this assignment:
- I am a very lazy person and am uninterested in this "homework" of which you speak.
- My "impressions" of the museum are completely irrelevant given that I know nothing about architecture or art. THAT is precisely why I am taking this course. If you like, make it the final assignment on which I can use all that I have learned to more expertly give my opinions.
- Yes, I assume the purpose of the exercise to convince ME that my opinions on things are just as valid, especially given a little time and effort toward the project.
- But seriously, if you were dropped onto this planet after having lived your whole life in a vacuum, you might need some background on what this building is, what purpose it serves, and what all the things inside are/mean/represent/etc.
- I know I wasn't just dropped in through a vacuum.
- I don't like this professor. He pages through the text and repeats the same lecture every day.
- Again, I'm lazy.
- Seriously though. I chose a Mark Rothko painting on which to expound and while the painting seems to have left some sort of impression on me, I'm not sure I can turn that impression into words because it might just be the type of thing that words can't express. (Isn't that what art is for?)
- I guess I could say that in the paper.
Listen, bottom line is this: I'm lazy, this teacher isn't teaching the way I prefer to be taught, and it's summer, and I'm 6 months pregnant, and I want to know art HISTORY before I'm forced to expound on art THEORY. (Yes, I realize he just wants my personal impressions, but I am incapable of that level of personal attachment in academic writing.)
That blue looks a little sickly on my monitor, frankly. The colors look better in person.
Still, the Rothko painting was the only painting in the museum that particular day that I couldn't get out of my head. I blame Simon Schama. Here are the notes I took while viewing the painting:
color fieldabstract expressionismnon objectiveground is blueprimary colorsnot sure what I'm looking at but it stays with meman approaches impatiently looks very closely @ painting, arms folded. don't know what he's looking for.no purposeful brushworktexture - N/Abrushwork - N/Acolor - all there issaturated - yesedges of rectangles are rough, not perfectly defined, eye creates rectangular shapestays in mind like coming indoors on a very bright dayhow did he choose his colors?I don't understand this painting but I think I'm looking for something that isn't there.
None of that is meant to be poetic or profound. That's exactly what I wrote, except I drew a box around "choose" up there instead of bold to emphasize the artist's conscious choice to my brain reading it later.
Six days later, further thoughts:
people who say "my kid could do that"
- they don't say "I could do that" because they know they can't or instinctively know there's something there they could not create
- Painting is deliberate, edges are rough but clear - children lack the control/decision-making - Rothko knew when he was done, made conscious decision to start, how to continue, when to end
Alright, fine, but still I feel like I've missed something. I still don't *get* it. Is there anything to get? I certainly like the painting, but it bugs me, as do a lot of paintings when I start looking at them, not just non-objective abstract expressionist pieces. I always get the impression (oh, there's that word) that a painting is trying to communicate some thought or idea or something to me, and that I don't speak the language.
Someone please tell me what I'm missing.
2 comments:
It's almost impossible to form a reasonable impression of a Rothko painting from a photo, but if I imagine it's an environment I'm standing in which I believe was generally one of his intentions, the first thing that I notice is how through color choice, opacity, and intensity, the upper field pulls me in while the lower field pushes me away. I thought this was particularly striking because Hans Hofmann, who was very influential in abstract expressionism, emphasized the concept of "push and pull" to his painting students.
I enjoyed reading this a lot, and your frustration with the assignment, nevertheless grappling with something. Your child must by now be four years old! :-)
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