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- <text id=93TT0877>
- <title>
- Jan. 11, 1993: The Masterpiece Road Show
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1993
- Jan. 11, 1993 Megacities
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- ART, Page 48
- The Masterpiece Road Show
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>An exhibit of ancient Greek sculpture is used to advance a specious
- political argument
- </p>
- <p>By ROBERT HUGHES
- </p>
- <p> It must be said, straight off, that The Greek Miracle:
- Classical Sculpture from the Dawn of Democracy, now at the
- National Gallery in Washington (it goes to the Metropolitan
- Museum in New York City in March), is a very odd show. Largely
- composed of loans from the Greek government, it combines a
- number of profound, exquisite and completely irreplaceable works
- of art, which wiser owners would not have exposed to the risks
- of travel, with an utter shallowness of argument about their
- social and ritual meanings. Insofar as an exhibition can
- assemble great sculpture and have practically no scholarly
- value, this one does.
- </p>
- <p> The reason is that The Greek Miracle is an exercise in
- political propaganda, and has to embrace stereotypes that no
- classicist today would accept without deep reservations. First,
- the exhibit wants to indicate how Greek sculpture changed in the
- classical period, by showing its movement from the frontal,
- rigid forms of 6th century B.C. kouroi, whose ancestry lay in
- Egyptian cult figures, to the more naturalistic treatment of
- balance and bodily movement one sees in works such as The
- Kritios Boy (circa 480 B.C.), which was found on the Acropolis.
- And it demonstrates this in considerable detail, through
- marvelous examples of 5th century sculpture that include the
- titanically grave and simple group of Atlas presenting the
- golden apples of the Hesperides to Herakles (from the Temple of
- Zeus at Olympia) and the famous low-relief carving of the armed
- goddess Athena, leaning on her spear, absorbed in thought, the
- body fixed in a space of almost pure geometry (from the
- Acropolis Museum in Athens).
- </p>
- <p> As an orientation course for those who don't know much
- about classical Greek sculpture--and as a source of unalloyed
- aesthetic pleasure for those who do--this show ought not to
- be missed. But neither should its second premise be taken
- seriously: the idea that there was some causal connection
- between the advent of the classical style in sculpture and that
- of democracy in Athenian politics. Both happened at roughly the
- same time: in the late 6th century an Athenian aristocrat,
- Kleisthenes, made an alliance with the people of Athens in order
- to defeat another noble, Isagoras, and pushed through a number
- of democratic reforms that were permanently enshrined in the
- Athenian constitution.
- </p>
- <p> These measures gave the vote and other rights to citizens
- who had not enjoyed them before, though not, of course, to
- slaves or women. But the idea that the beginnings of democracy
- in Athens changed the way that rituals, gods and heroes were
- represented is hokum: exactly the same changes of style occurred
- in cities, like Olympia, that were run by tyrants. The fact that
- modern Greeks apparently want to believe it--this being a time
- of super chauvinism in Greece, as in other Balkan countries--means nothing, except in the scheme of simplistic
- politico-cultural fantasy. You might as well claim that Abstract
- Expressionism was "caused" by the election of Harry Truman.
- Nevertheless, such is the show's political motive, and it seems
- a poor pretext for taking great art and jetting it to America
- like so many get-well cards, for the sake of political p.r.
- </p>
- <p> In its reflexive idealization, the show sets before us a
- notion of Greek antiquity that was conceived in the 18th century
- by the German archaeologist-connoisseur Johann Winckelmann and
- then elaborated into an all-pervading imagery through the 19th.
- Balance, harmony, transcendence, sublimation--all are
- characteristics of great classical art, but not the whole story,
- and not one that would have been wholly intelligible to the
- ancient Greeks. It is as though the organizers of this show
- still felt obliged to believe in the division of the world
- claimed by the original Athenians. Here is Hellas, populated by
- people. Outside, is the domain of hoi barbaroi, those who are
- not quite human: the superstitious Orientals, the treacherous
- mountain dwellers, the lesser breeds without the law. The
- Greeks, by contrast, stop just short of turning into marble
- statues of themselves--effigies of undying
- self-congratulation, picked up by later cultures to signify the
- reign of the past over the present.
- </p>
- <p> It is true that since the image of classical Greece began
- to lose the power it had accumulated up to the end of the 19th
- century, many writers have found this marmoreal stereotype
- insufficient. "How one can imagine oneself among them," mused
- the English poet Louis MacNeice, no mean classicist himself, in
- his 1938 poem, Autumn Journal, "I do not know." And was this
- antiquity a world of heroes or something more like modern
- Athens?
- </p>
- <p> When I should remember the paragons
- </p>
- <p> of Hellas
- </p>
- <p> I think instead
- </p>
- <p> Of the crooks, the adventurers, the
- </p>
- <p> opportunists,
- </p>
- <p> The careless athletes and the fancy
- </p>
- <p> boys,
- </p>
- <p> The hair-splitters,
- </p>
- <p> the pedants, the
- </p>
- <p> hard-boiled
- </p>
- <p> sceptics,
- </p>
- <p> And the Agora and
- </p>
- <p> the noise
- </p>
- <p> Of the demagogues
- </p>
- <p> and the quacks; and the women
- </p>
- <p> pouring
- </p>
- <p> Libations over graves,
- </p>
- <p> And the trimmers at Delphi and the
- </p>
- <p> dummies at Sparta and lastly
- </p>
- <p> I think of the slaves.
- </p>
- <p> No such doubts obtrude upon the archaic fantasy world set
- up by the writers in the catalog to this show. Slavery, as
- important an institution for Periclean Greece as for America's
- antebellum South, does not enter their vague lucubrations about
- the matched "miracles" of Art and Democracy. For them, all is
- idealism, naturalism, the world of formal purity, grace and
- refinement. Whatever speaks of demonism, fear, magic and
- irrational superstition is simply swept under the carpet; and
- yet these were colossally important elements even in the
- "rational" Athens of the 5th century B.C., let alone in the rest
- of Greece. The naively optimistic idea expressed in Nicholas
- Gage's introduction, echoing a long succession of enlightened
- Hellenophiles from Winckelmann to Matthew Arnold, that "Mortal
- man became the standard by which things were judged and
- measured," simply does not fit the facts of classical culture.
- On the contrary: the Greeks of Pericles' time, like their
- ancestors and successors, were obsessed with the weakness of the
- dike that protected their social and mental constructions
- against uncontrollable forces. Their culture was webbed with
- placatory or "apotropaic" rituals, charms and images meant to
- keep the demons at bay.
- </p>
- <p> This is why classical Greek sculpture, in its original
- form, was so very unlike the version made of it by
- Neoclassicists 2,000 years later, and recycled in this show. "No
- symbols or special trappings of divinity," writes Gage, "were
- required beyond the figure's physical harmony. The most perfect
- beauty, to the Greek of the 5th century, was the pure and
- unadorned." But classical Greek sculpture was neither pure nor
- unadorned; its decor has been lost or worn away. Were we to see
- it in its original state, we would find it shockingly "vulgar."
- All the great figures and sculpture were painted in violent
- reds, ochers and blues, like a seaside restaurant in Skopelos.
- The colossal figure of Athena inside the Parthenon was sheathed
- in ivory "skin." As for adornment, there were "real" metal
- spears fixed in the hands of marble warriors, brightly simulated
- eyes with colored irises set in the now empty sockets of The
- Kritios Boy. And far from rising above anxiety, classical Greek
- art pullulated with horrors: snakes, monsters, decapitated
- Gorgons, all designed to ward off the terrors of the spirit
- world. One sometimes wonders if ancient Greece, more lurid than
- white, so obsessed with blood feud and inexpungible guilt,
- wasn't closer to modern Bosnia than to the bright world of
- Winckelmann. But you cannot put that kind of "classicism" in a
- museum, or relate it to "democracy."
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
-