Most of us assume that super stardom is a phenomenon of the last
century, a product of the mass media catapulting actors, musicians,
writers and other creative types into the public arena via branding
through television, film, the Internet and tabloid-gorged pop culture.
Though we're regularly bombarded with the ventures and visages of
contemporary idols, both ersatz and authentic, and it all seems
singularly moderne and cutting edge, it's not.
If we consider
such ubiquitous marketing tactics to be the hallmark of post-industrial
revolution communications, how then do we explain 18th-century
neo-classical painting sensation and cultural über-icon, Angelica
Kauffman, who had a similarly diverse and widespread impact on European
society that women like Madonna, Oprah and Di have had on ours?
Though
her fame wasn't manifest in the form of music videos, magazines, haute
couture or talk shows, in the context of the late 1700s, Kauffman was,
for all intents and purposes, Fortune 500, rock-star royalty. Her
intellect and charisma was renowned and her imagery infiltrated elite
echelons and everyday life in the form of lampshades, fans, calendars,
architectural design, interior décor and teacups, which is all to say,
she was an omni-mediated Martha Stewart in her own time.
Quoting
an engraver of the day who was overwhelmed with orders for Kauffman
prints, Dartmouth art history professor and Kauffman scholar, Angela
Rosenthal, attests that, "The whole world was Angelica-mad." And
Rosenthal — who will be delivering what is sure to be an absorbing
presentation on Kauffman Wednesday at Brooks Memorial Library in
Brattleboro — is the person to ask.
With a new, handsome
350-page book out — "Angelica Kauffman: Art and Sensibility," which
just won this year's Historians of British Art prize in the pre-1800
category — Rosenthal is a fountain of details, personal and
professional, about her subject, as well as captivating contextual
insights that illuminate the academic and social climate in which
Kauffman's star rose so dramatically.
When we spoke earlier this
week, I was curious as to how it was possible that a woman born in 1741
could have possibly enjoyed such a successful career — which included
painting portraits of kings and queens and establishing the Royal
College of Art in London — when 150 years later women still were not
being admitted to the Académie des Beaux-Arts in Paris.
Apparently,
it pertained more to a serendipitous and somewhat esoteric shift in
socio-cultural ideals than a sudden wave of progressive thinking. "This
age of sensibility was associated with private, feminine virtues,
emotionality and the language of the heart," explained Rosenthal.
"Women were considered the experts of these virtues in that time and
Kauffman was a skilled artist, a great businesswoman and very sociable.
When people sat for her, they also wanted to talk to her."
Born
in Switzerland, Kauffman lost her mother at age 16, and thereafter
followed her Austrian father, a traveling painter, back to Italy, where
she'd already spent much of her childhood studying ancient Greek
statuary and masters of the Renaissance. She eventually fell in with
the English "grand tour" crowd and, soon after being welcomed into
Rome's Academy of St. Luke at age 22, she moved to London, where her
reputation as an extraordinarily skilled painter and sublime
conversationalist preceded her.
"She had already painted leading
Shakespeare interpreter, mega-celebrity of the day, David Garrick,"
said Rosenthal. "She was known as 'the painter of Garrick.'" In those
days, such accolades that linked artists to beloved figures of the
stage or throne heralded immediate almost rabid adoration by the
teeming masses
As one critic phrased it, Kauffman "burst upon
the hemisphere of painting as a luminous wonder," with her widely
celebrated romantic aesthetic, whose glowing palette and romantic
subject matter seemed to intoxicate the viewing public, including
royalty.
Her faithful reinterpretations of classical figures,
grouped together using ancient devices of composition, poses and
gesture, were set against verdant backgrounds and incorporated symbolic
elements such as lyres, lambs and scrolls (the arts, innocence and
education, respectively).
Kauffman's soft, peaceful portraits
were not simply poetic odes to beauty and nature, they reflected the
aesthetics and values of the period in pivotal ways that served to
challenge the perception of gender roles and relations.
"Later
in the 18th century, we had 'men of feeling,'" expounds Rosenthal. "It
was a sentimental culture when the female voice appeared in literature
with Samuel Richardson's novel "Pamela: or, Virtue Rewarded" and it
transformed rough masculinity. Toughness and violence did not reign
but, instead, emotional depth."
Even in light of this cultural
swell toward the feminine perspective, Kauffman's monumental academic
and professional accomplishments remain remarkable today when one
considers that it was an age when few women achieved great success or
distinction.
Rosenthal finds the evolution and impact of
Kauffman's achievements entirely pertinent to societal obstacles and
inner messages with which women continue to wrestle today. "If it is
held to be somehow something that women don't do, then women themselves
hold this mores. It is a mentality of the time that we enforce — not
just men who prohibit women from doing what they want to do, but the
whole patriarchal culture. Certainly, Kauffman tried to negotiate this,
she was trying to please and the ideal of femininity was regarded of
the arbiter of this taste."
"German poet Johann Gottfried von
Herder called Kauffman 'the most cultivated person in Europe,'"
continued Rosenthal. "So if she had intelligent people sitting for
portraits, she had to be polished, speak different languages, be
charming and flattering without being too submissive. In portraiture
you're on equal footing because the sitter is vulnerable in the hands
of the artist and that equation was loaded in the 18th century."
Considering
the stature of Kauffman's subjects, this dynamic must have been
particularly thrilling for her and propelled her career forward at an
unprecedented clip, into uncharted territory. "When Queen Charlotte sat
for Kauffman," affirmed Rosenthal, "her patronage instantly went up."
Kauffman
was at the center of a vibrant intellectual milieu populated not only
by wealthy patrons and monarchs, but by fellow female achievers of the
day. "She cultivated relationships with a fantastic series of creative
women and she made monumental portraits, almost female Temples of the
Muses, or Parnassus. Women would sit for Kauffman because she was this
cultured woman with a heightened sensibility."
Eighteenth-century
English painter James Northcote encapsulated Kauffman's influence more
than 200 years ago in a letter he wrote to her dearest friend and
colleague, Sir Joshua Reynolds, in which he said Kauffman had become
synonymous with successful women in the arts.
Rosenthal
considers the lessons in Kauffman's remarkable professional trajectory
to be entirely germane to the continuing need for contemporary girls
and women to be inspired and challenged. "It's important for
21st-century women to know about women of the past," she said. "It's
great to see powerful, creative women who succeeded and contributed
fundamentally to the culture."
At last year's bicentennial
commemoration of her death, Kauffman's achievements were once again
lauded when Austria went all out to honor its favorite female artisan
and Rosenthal was clearly moved by the enthusiasm accorded her longtime
academic subject.
"At the opening celebration, there were 800
invited guests, plus a documentary film about her and they put her
portrait on the Austrian shilling and a new stamp," marveled Rosenthal,
who delivered a talk at the event. "She's a national hero there."
In
describing the festivities, Rosenthal reflected candidly on her own joy
at seeing Kauffman so deservingly lionized. "Sometimes scholarship is a
lonely endeavor between you and the work of art, so this was
astonishing for me."
Angelica Kauffman's achievements are
astonishing to anyone who explores them, as is Rosenthal's wisdom and
zeal on the topic. Take advantage of her remarkable expertise by
heading to Brooks Library on Wednesday — and bring your daughters.
Online: www.brooks.lib.vt.us
Songs that unite past, present and future: Samirah Evans jazzes up weekend celebrations of Dr. King and the inauguration
Hope. Change. Possibility.
For a very long while, these words were largely missing from our collective lexicon in regards to the sociopolitical climate in this country and, since November, it's been clear that we were desperate to expand both our expectations and our vernacular.
One of the most eloquent and powerful indicators of any major shift in societal sensibilities is the arts. Artists not only record change but, by definition, they are agents of it as well, by virtue of the simple fact that they create. Painters realize the impossible with brushes and canvas. Writers conjure characters and situations with paper and ink. And musicians invent concepts and emotions with instruments and lyrics.
History has been documented by artists throughout the centuries and landmark moments, in particular, have provided inspiration for informative, galvanizing work that's filled museums, libraries and record stores with extraordinarily potent forms of creative expression.
So when jazz luminary Samirah Evans was asked by the good people at the Old Tavern at Grafton if she'd like to do a concert there this weekend and if she might have a particular concept for the show, it was a no-brainer like no other.
"'Do I have a concept?," she recalls thinking, "Yes, I have a concept!'"
With the show taking place a day before Martin Luther King, Jr. Day and two days prior to Barack Obama's inauguration to the United States presidency, Evans quickly came up with the perfect title — "A Vision Realized" — and began putting together a song list that would exemplify the values and vision shared by these remarkable men.
Speaking by phone in between rehearsing and hearing from colleagues eager to join in, Evans talks about her motivation behind organizing this momentous celebration.
Pointing out the connection between Obama's humanistic sensibilities and Dr. King's dream of a country where children would not be judged by the color of their skin but by the content of their character, she explains, "Most people think you can fight it out but MLK put his life on the line for what he believed."
"And now there's Obama's willingness to feel that dialogue can make a difference," she adds. "Regardless of whether he's black or white, it's his impeccable character that's important."
The concert will celebrate present-day triumphs as well as reflect on struggles in the past. With a song list that includes impassioned comments on the Civil Rights Movement, such as Nina Simone's "Mississippi Goddam" and Sam Cooke's "A Change Is Gonna Come," Evans has planned a concert that will give voice to the evolution of America's conscience on the issue of race up to the pivotal event that takes place on Tuesday.
"I want to sing songs that deal with social injustice and lead to the idea of hope and moving forward and possibility," says Evans. "Like 'Imagine' and 'Somewhere Over the Rainbow.' It's so hopeful: 'If birds can fly so can I.' You know, we shall overcome."
Having started her singing career when, fresh out of college, she took the stage at the legendary New Orleans Jazz and Heritage Festival (this woman seems to do everything big and bold), Evans went on to become an acclaimed fixture in the New Orleans jazz scene. She has toured Europe, Asia and North and South America, playing alongside greats like B.B. King, James Brown and Irma Thomas, and has two exhilarating CDs out, including the freshly pressed, deliciously melodic and profoundly moving, "My Little Bodhisattva."
Listen to one bar of a Samirah Evans tune and her great success and stature in the jazz world instantly makes sense. With phrasing that inventively sculpts each line, whether she's singing a familiar standard or one of her many original compositions, and a timbre that ranges from sonorous to silken to sandy, Evans imprints her endearingly buoyant charm and palpable emotional depth onto every tune. Add to it a Klieg-light smile, a ready laugh and the energy of a kid in a candy shop and her lives shows are enigmatic and invigorating.
Considering that she hails from a place known for its vibrant energy, soulful style and robust appetite for pure, unadulterated fun, jazz is the obvious medium for someone like Ms. Evans and we Vermonters should count our lucky stars she's brought that mojo to our fair state.
After Hurricane Katrina, Evans and her husband Chris Lenois moved to his native Brattleboro and she has been building a new and enthusiastic fan base here ever since. Having bestowed her exuberant presence upon numerous clubs in the region, last September Evans kicked off the Vermont Jazz Center's concert season with a sold-out evening that featured saxophone maestro Charles Neville. She is clearly on the same sort of trajectory she experienced in New Orleans, making this concert — which takes place in the White Church across from the Old Tavern in Grafton at 3 p.m. Sunday — even more of a coup for local jazz fans.
With a dynamic, intuitive band comprised of bassist George Kaye, Bob Wiener on drums, pianist Miro Sprague and Dia Silverstein playing sax, along with special guests including indie-folk songstress Lisa McCormick, gospel-soul singer Moonlight and singer/guitar duo Cindy and Greg Hellmann, this event will pack a powerful punch, both musically and politically.
One of the most controversial songs slated is "Strange Fruit," a poetically ominous account of an Indiana lynching written by Abel Meeropol and made famous by Billie Holiday who first performed it at the Greenwich Village venue, Café Society, in 1939. House rules there were that when Miss Holiday performed this tune, with which she always ended each set, the entire staff was to remain motionless and silent, in reverence for the gravity of its message. At Sunday's performance we all will be, unquestionably, similarly attentive, particularly considering the monumental symbology to be found in the strides and struggles that have brought this nation from those somber days of oppression and hatred to Tuesday's awe-inspiring, unparalleled event on the steps of the Capitol.
Amidst her immense reverence for the sociocultural hardship and endurance that her concert is honoring, Evans emphasizes that joy is at its core. "I'll be singing New Orleans classics and choice standards as well," she attests. "I want it to be a show where everyone is welcome, an all-inclusive celebration of King's legacy and Obama's inauguration. They're songs that will leave people feeling really full and energized."
Tickets are $10 for adults (kids under 12 free), are tax deductible and benefit the Windham Foundation's Grafton Fund, which supports cultural programs in the area.
On a personal note: Due to an increase in other journalistic commitments, Sover Scene will appear on an intermittent basis going forward. I encourage everyone to stay in touch via the archive blog and by reading this phenomenal paper, Vermont's oldest, most eloquent and fearless family-run daily.
Change is good and, as with Ms. Evans' concert on Sunday, I too celebrate what I predict is a new chapter of hope and possibility for everyone!
Online: www.samirahevans.com
www.oldtavern.com
Annie: annieguyoncommunications.com
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