The recent travelogue about my daughter and my trip to the Metropolitan Museum of Art probably came
as a surprise to many…
Especially if they’ve
been reading anything else I’ve written, all of which piles up substantial
evidence of my pride in being an uncultured boor.
However, the MET ranks
with the Bronx Zoo, and the Natural History Museum, as New York locations where I
feel at home.
My slightly askew
perspective from the rampant snootiness often associated with the fine arts may
help others of the “uncultured boor” variety to find the same enjoyment there I
have.
Therefore, I have
compiled a set of ten helpfulish hints on the enjoyment of the massive collection of
treasures
Shall we begin?
HINT ONE:
Let’s just throw this
out there in the open from the get go.
Whether its anatomically
detailed muscular classic or neo-classic marble statues, oil paintings of
chubby renaissance women, or tribal artifacts and storage vessels, artists have
made representations of the unclothed human form as often as they could get
away with throughout history.
And your kids will be
fine.
There are nudes in art
now, they will continue to be in whatever media is developed, and they have been
since the first people scratched each other on cave walls.
(That sounded dirtier
than I meant to.)
And civilization is
still here.
If you don’t make a big
deal about it, the kids won’t either.
As they hit puberty, if
they start to linger in an exhibit with a vague expression you may have to give
them a nudge, but honestly, aside from some giggling, it will all be fine.
Granted, if I’m there,
there may be far more giggling, as I point out famous works of art like:
“Here we have the Muse
Transistoria demonstrating how she can use her right boob to tune Hercules’s
favorite station on her left boob.”
Summary:
ART
IS NAKED, DEAL WITH IT
HINT TWO:
While taking a break for lunch in the café adjacent to the
American Sculpture Garden may at first seem like an idyllic and peaceful way to
celebrate a meal surrounded with cultural highlights, remember a couple of points.
A) The Sculpture Garden
was built and arranged long before the café was added.
B) While an impressive and thought provoking
neoclassical piece, the Struggle of the
Two Natures in Man, sculpted by George Gray Barnard from 1892-1894 is a
massively heavy piece of stone and the difficulty and danger to the art likely
prevented it from being shifted after its initial placement, regardless of
changes to the building layout.
C) A Giant Marble Ass is
not the most appetizing background for one’s lunch.
Summary:
CONSTRUCTION
ORDER IS IMPORTANT
HINT THREE
Prejudices against Art
Museums are normally connected with folks saying, “I don’t care about a bunch
of paintings.”
The thing is “Art” has
an enormously wide definition.
I admit, as a kid I was
bored when my Dad wanted to spend a long time looking at the European paintings
on the second floor.
Now, at least in that
respect, I’ve achieved my greatest goal in life by becoming him.
I was never against
going to the Art Museum, or as I first knew it.
When I got a little
older it was:
“The Museum with the
awesome weapons, armor, and the wicked cool Egyptian section.”
My wife refers to it as:
“The Museum with the
pretty furniture and room displays.”
While my daughter adds:
“And the cool musical
instruments.”
The point is, art is
different for every viewer, and the MET has representations of nearly all of
it, meaning just about anyone can find a section that will interest them. Since the
place is so phenomenally huge, seeing it all in one day is impossible
anyway. A quick map check will lead to
something to strike anyone’s fancy.
Summary:
THERE
IS SOMETHING FOR EVERYONE
HINT FOUR:
The good news: finding
something on the map that will be of interest is easy.
The bad news: human
instinct, especially for young ones, is to run to the thing they’re interested
in and ignore everything else.
Like most of life, the
path matters.
When the kids start
rushing, unless there’s a bathroom involved, slow them down.
With the creative
achievements of human history lining every wall and passageway, there’s a high
likelihood of them noticing something they had no idea they liked, but may
shape their personality in years to come.
Or as we refer to it in
my family:
“OOH! SHINY THING!!!!”
Summary:
THE
JOURNEY IS IMPORTANT
HINT FIVE:
Knowing the size of New
York Zoos and Museums, I tend to be kind of a pain when people ask me to show
them around.
Or as my daughter puts
it:
“Don’t let daddy see you
sitting on a bench, he gets crankier than usual.”
These places are far too
large to rest in areas with nothing to occupy one’s attention.
Having said that, in all
of them, treating the map as a checklist is an enormous waste of potential
enjoyment and learning.
In the American Museum
of Natural History, some of the dioramas and Dinosaurs are huge enough that
even a rapid pass by insures enough time is spent to take in the grandeur.
Any moving animal in the
Bronx Zoo can normally catch the attention of the most exhausted person.
But the sheer density of
the works in the MET makes it easy to whip by and miss something.
I never got why Van Gogh
was as well respected as he is, until I stood and looked at his works for a bit
in person. There’s a dynamic element to
them that isn’t conveyed through photographs, and requires more than a glance
to pick up.
And the classics have
insane levels of detail in them that can’t be noticed when power walking past.
There’s one still life
Dad always loved because the knife on the table looks completely three
dimensional.
It’s in a room full of
fantastically beautiful still lifes of the period. Plowing through the room at warp speed, a
viewer would only pick up:
“Fruit- wine bottle –
fruit- wine bottle- skull- fruit – wine bottle, fruit.”
And miss the details
that are what makes a painting a work of art.
The same is true for the
sculptures, furniture, jewelry, or whatever.
I just used the stuff I
rushed by as a kid for the example.
Heck, it took me about
half a dozen youthful visits before I noticed the incredibly faint, but beautifully
rendered translucent ghosts in the detailed background of the Joan of Arc
painting...
Once I took the time to stand there in appreciation of the mix of emotions on Joan’s face.
Once I took the time to stand there in appreciation of the mix of emotions on Joan’s face.
Summary
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