Crimes of passion? : Trinitonian
by Michael Schreyach The history of art is full of heists. A crafty theft captures the imagination. An evasive thief can even become a kind of counter-cultural hero, like Vincenzo Peruggia, the Italian handyman who nicked the Mona Lisa from the Louvre in 1911 and was on the lam for two years before <a href="http://www.tiffanyjewelry-rings.com/"><strong>tiffany sale</strong></a> being caught. Apparently, he wanted to repatriate Leonardo da Vinciâs masterwork to the painterâs native Italy. (Tidbit: Picasso was hauled in by the police for questioning about the case due to his association with another shady art thief). Some thefts disappoint both the thieves and–obviously–the victims of their crime. The drawing recently stolen from an upscale hotel in Los Angeles may or may not be the authentic Rembrandt it was assumed to be. (Note to self: Make sure artwork is real before stealing it.) These events bring to my mind other sorts of actions directed at artworks, particularly abstract ones. A few years ago, a woman planted a lipstick kiss (in homage, she claimed) on a painting by Cy Twombly. (If you havenât been to Houston to see the Menilâs ############## of his works, go ASAP.) The woman was charged with vandalism, but only required to pay Twombly the symbolic sum of one euro in damages. There are more extreme cases. A man slashed a large abstract painting by Barnett Newman in Amsterdamâs Stedelijk Museum <a href="http://www.beatsbydre-sell.com/heartbeats%C3%A2%C2%84%C2%A2-by-lady-gaga-high-performance-inear-headphones-with-controltalk%C3%82%C2%AE-black-p-5734.html"><strong>heartbeats by lady gaga</strong></a> in 1986. (Check out his paintings on the Coates Library database, ARTstor.) The man returned in 1997 and knifed a second Newman painting. Why? Maybe he found the paintings threatening in some way, and his attacks were–in his mind–self-defense. Newman often told a story to illustrate the intense effects his paintings could have on viewers. A painter friend of his got terribly agitated in front of Newmanâs work. The man was so upset that he had tears in his eyes. Newman said: âWhatâs the trouble?â The friend responded: âYou made me aware of myself.â Self-awareness, apparently, can be terrifying. As an assistant professor of art history who teaches abstraction, Iâm often asked: âBut what does it mean?â I doubt Iâve ever given a satisfactory answer. Iâve never found it very useful to approach abstract artworks like Iâm decoding a message. But I do think that abstract paintings can have a profound effect on those who view them. In Newmanâs story, it seems that coming to understand an abstract painting is a lot like coming to understand another person, or even oneself: it can be difficult. But what the process seems to involve is open acknowledgement, not cynical avoidance. Perhaps a painting by Newman asks viewers to acknowledge that to understand it (to understand its otherness), they must simultaneously come to know themselves in relation to it. Newmanâs âmessage,â if we decide to call it that, is that we donât have to assume a skeptical <a href="http://www.rosettastonespanishlearning.com/"><strong>rosetta stone spanish</strong></a> position when it comes to the unknown, whether itâs the meaning of abstraction, ourselves or another person. If you donât like that message, please–please!–donât attack the art. But even if you do like it, donât steal the painting.
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