15 September 2013

"Strange Requests"

by Louis Phillips

[Louis Phillips is a widely published poet, playwright, and short story writer who focuses extensively on works for children. This column was originally published in Playbill: The National Theatre Magazine vol. 93, no. 2 (February 1993).  I thought it was amusing enough to republish and share with ROT readers.  ~Rick]

Not long ago I found myself in the Drama Book Shop (723 Seventh Avenue) and the proprietors—Arthur and Rozanne Seelen—were kind enough to share one of their hobbies with me.  They walked into a back room and pulled out a tattered spiral notebook.  In the notebook were pages and pages of strange titles, all of which had been requested at one time or another by patrons—titles that are somehow not quite right.

Arthur started the list some 15 years ago [i.e., 1978], when a customer phoned to ask if he had in stock a copy of “The Madwoman of Ohio” by Jean Anouilh.  Arthur’s extensive stock did not include that title, but perhaps the caller meant The Madwoman of Chaillot?  After Arthur filled the order, he jotted down the glorious garble—The Madwoman of Ohio, and voila! a new hobby was born.

Below are a few more of the fractured titles or near-misses that prospective customers have requested from the Drama Book Shop.  All of the titles are from actual inquiries; none have been made up.  [I’ve added my guess at the real play title, which Phillips didn’t supply—as close as I can come.  ~Rick]

·   Two Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest  [One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest by Ken Kesey (1963)]
·   The Night the Rose Spent in Jail  [The Night Thoreau Spent in Jail by Robert E. Lee and Jerome Lawrence (1970)]
·   Moliere’s The Doctor Inside Himself  [The Doctor In Spite of Himself (1666)]
·   Andrew Cleves and the Lion  [Androcles and the Lion by G. B. Shaw (1913)]
·   The Screens by Jean Nate  [The Screens by Jean Genet (1961)]
·   Miss Alliance  [Misalliance by G. B. Shaw (1910)]
·   She Stops the Concorde  [She Stoops to Conquer by Oliver Goldsmith (1773)]
·   Bucket by Anouilh  [Becket by Jean Anouilh (1960)]
·   Such a Perversity in Chicago  [Sexual Perversity in Chicago by David Mamet (1972)]
·   A Phoenix That’s All Too Frequent  [A Phoenix Too Frequent by Christopher Fry (1947)]
·   If the Morning Comes for Electra  [Mourning Becomes Electra by Eugene O’Neill (1931)]
·   Lou Gerrick Did Not Die of Cancer  [Lou Gehrig Did Not Die of Cancer by Jason Miller (1971)]
·   Once Upon a Catholic  [Once Upon a Mattress with music by Mary Rodgers and lyrics by Marshall Barer (1959) + Once a Catholic by Mary O'Malley (1977)]
·   The Aspirin Papers  [The Aspern Papers by Michael Redgrave (1962); also an opera by Dominick Argento (1988); both adapted from an 1888 Henry James novel]
·   Lou Grant Didn’t Die of Cancer [Lou Gehrig Did Not Die of Cancer, above]
·   The Crystal Zoo (for The Glass Menagerie?)  [I’ll go with The Glass Menagerie by Tennessee Williams (1944)]
·   The Road Runner Stumbles  [The Runner Stumbles by Milan Stitt (1976)]
·   The Hound of Baskerball  [The Hound of the Baskervilles adapted from the Arthur Conan Doyle story (1901-02) for many scripts, including radio plays; among them is one by Christopher Martin produced Off-Broadway at the Classic Stage Company in New York (1976)]
·   Waiting for Lefty Godot  [Waiting for Lefty by Clifford Odets (1935) + Waiting for Godot by Samuel Beckett (1953)]
·   A View from the River by Arthur Miller  [A View from the Bridge (1955)]
·   A Phoenix Too Fragrant  [A Phoenix Too Frequent, above]
·   Anne of a Thousand Clowns  [Anne of the Thousand Days by Maxwell Anderson (1948) + A Thousand Clowns by Herb Gardner (1962)]

[I think I managed to get them all, and relatively correctly.  (I’ve actually performed three of the plays listed—the real ones, of course, not the imaginary titles: Cuckoo’s Nest in 1975 [Dr. Spivey], Misalliance in 1977 [“Gunner”], and Becket in college, 1965 or ’66 [French Priest].)  I wonder if DBS (which has moved since Phillips was there—it’s now located at 250 W. 40th Street between 7th and 8th Avenues) still keeps the list.  It would be fun to see what new titles had been added since this collection was published 20 years ago.

[DBS, the oldest bookstore dedicated to the performing arts in the U.S., was founded in 1923 (unofficially in 1917 as an ad hoc bookseller in theater lobbies) by Marjorie Seligman.  Arthur Seelen (born Seelenfreund in Brooklyn in 1923), a former actor who bought the bookstore in 1958, died in 2000 at age 76; Rozanne Seelen (née Ritch) is a former dancer originally from San Antonio.  The couple married in 1980, after Ritch had worked at the store for several years.  After Seelen’s death, his widow asked her nephew, Allen Hubby, another former dancer who’d been Seelen’s assistant, to become co-owner and after DBS moved to its current location in 2001, he opened an 80-seat black-box theater in the basement.  It’s named for Arthur Seelen and the 2008 Tony-winning musical, In the Heights, was developed there. In 2011, the Drama Book Shop itself received a Tony Honor for Excellence in the Theatre.]


10 September 2013

The Theater Experience


[While I was in the Washington area recently, I spotted a short article in the Washington Post that laid out the backstage process of mounting a stage production.  Though aimed at children, the information is ageless, so I’m republishing it on ROT for anyone who’s never been back stage while a show is going on. 

[After I returned to New York City, I read another short article, this one about attending theater outdoors.  New York Times review-writer Charles Isherwood writes specifically about attending Shakespeare plays at the Public Theater’s Delacorte Theater in Central Park, but the experience is similar at many outdoor performance venues.  (Oddly, this article was originally published not in the Times’ habitual location for theater news, but in Friday’s second arts section, devoted to fine arts and leisure.  I guess, because the performances take place in the park, it’s a “leisure activity.”)

[I think these two pieces go together because they both describe aspects of theater most of us don’t think about when we’re sitting in a theater seat in the auditorium of a theater building.  One shows what goes on beyond the audience’s usual awareness; the other is from a spectator’s point of view, but a perspective not often considered by most of us.]

“BEHIND THE SCENES”
“STAGING A PLAY INVOLVES MUCH MORE THAN ACTING”
by Moira E. McLaughlin

[“Staging a Play” was originally published in the KidsPost section of the Washington Post on 23 June.  Though it was intended for children, it’s still a cogent, if brief, description of what goes on back stage when a play is mounted, even if that play is for an audience of youngsters.  (It’s the same work whether the script is Shakespeare’s, David Mamet’s, Aurand Harris’s, or my friend Kirk Woodward’s; see “The Legend of Sleepy Hollow: Children's Theater in America,” 25 November 2009 on ROT).]

Imagination Stage’s musical “Peter Pan and Wendy” will have its “opening night” Wednesday [26 June], meaning it’s the first time you can see the show. Wendy, Peter Pan, Captain Hook and the Lost Boys will get in and out of trouble as they journey through Neverland. They will sing, dance and even trick your eyes into believing that they’re flying. Lights, sets, costumes and six actors will help guide you as you fall under the magical spell of theater.

Less than three weeks ago, the stage and the whole show looked a lot different. There were no lights, no sets, no costumes and no audience. There was just a bare stage and a script.

LEARNING WHERE TO MOVE

“So I’ll end up where?” asked Michael John Casey, who plays Smee, Captain Hook’s sidekick, during a rehearsal. He was wearing a green Boston Celtics cap, he had a pencil stuck behind his ear and he was carrying around his script (the words that the actors speak), jotting down notes here and there.

All the “Peter Pan and Wendy” actors had gotten the scripts and a recording of the music before rehearsals began. The first rehearsal was a “read-through,” and the actors sat at a table with their scripts, read their parts and talked about the characters and the story.

For this rehearsal, they had moved into the black box theater. (A black box theater is a simple space with black walls.)

“I’d rather have you end up here,” replied Kathryn Chase Bryer, the director of the show, pointing to a spot. Without scenery and furniture on the stage, the actors relied on pink, purple and yellow tape on the floor to tell them where the sets would be.

They were working on blocking, which is deciding exactly where all the actors should be while they’re onstage.

“Wendy and the boys, you’re coming from stage right, up the staircase and cross the rock,” Bryer said. “Stage right” means the side of the stage that’s to the right of an actor who is facing the audience.

The feeling at the rehearsal bounced back and forth between serious focus and lighthearted joking as the actors got into character and then broke from their characters to listen to Bryer and share a quick joke.

The cast, or the people in the show, spent all morning on a scene that would take only three minutes to perform.

THE WORK OF AN ACTOR

“It’s definitely hard work, but every rehearsal I’ve been in, it’s always fun,” said Jonathan Atkinson, 29, who plays Peter Pan. (He remembers his first performance, a puppet show he put on for guests when he was 4 years old.)

Atkinson said his favorite part of rehearsals is “getting to know new people . . . and getting to know a brand-new character. That’s really exciting.” Atkinson has performed in about 40 musicals and plays – and auditioned for many more – but he still gets nervous every time he steps onstage.

“That’s just the way I am,” he said. “If I didn’t feel that way, I’d think something was wrong.”

LIGHTS!

Putting on a performance involves a lot more people than just the actors. More than 20 people started working on this “Peter Pan” production months ago. Set designers worked closely with Bryer to figure out what to build. They sketched ideas and then started building the scenery. Just days before the show, they “loaded in” the sets. (That means they brought them onto the stage.)

A costume designer made the costumes, and a lighting designer figured out how to light the stage. A choreographer taught the actors the dance numbers, and a musical director helped them learn the music.

During “tech week,” which is made up of long work days right before the show opens, all the elements of the show come together.

“It’s a little magical that way,” Bradley Cooper said. He’s the production manager, the guy who makes sure all the behind-the-scenes work runs smoothly. “It always seems to find a way to come together in the end.”

As soon as the show is over, the tech crew will “strike the set,” or take it down, so that work on the next show can begin.

PUTTING IT ALL TOGETHER

Bryer started working on “Peter Pan and Wendy” more than six months ago. She began reading and researching the play, thinking about what she wanted the overall message of the show to be. She calls herself an editor, thinking and talking about ideas and then deciding what the best ones are.

Bryer said that once the show opens, her job is done. She said she often feels sad because, after spending so much time with the actors and crew and with the story, she must walk away. That sounds a little like Wendy, who leaves Neverland at the end of the show and says, “Goodbye, nursery. Goodbye, Peter.”

THE PLAY

What: “Peter Pan and Wendy,” adapted (from the 1904 play and 1911 novel by J. M. Barrie) by Alyn Cardarelli, with music by Steve. Directed by Kathryn Chase Bryer, with Jonathan Atkinson and Justine Moral (Peter Pan and Wendy), James Konicek (Captain Hook and Mr. Darling), Michael John Casey (Smee), Angela Miller (Tiger Lily and Mrs. Darling), Matt Dewberry and Dan Van Why (the Lost Boys). Music directed by George Fulginiti-Shakar, sets designed by Klyph Stanford, lighting by Jason Arnold, costumes by Katie Touart, choreography by Krissie Marty, and sound by Christopher Baine.

When: 26 June-11 August. Tuesday-Friday at 10:30 a.m., Saturday-Sunday at 1:30 p.m. and 4 p.m.; additional shows 6, 20, and 27 July at 11 a.m. and 12 July at 7 p.m.

Who: Imagination Stage, founded as BAPA (Bethesda Academy of Performing Arts) in 1979, which “produces theater and arts education programs which nurture, challenge, and empower young people of all abilities.”  According to its website, “Imagination Stage envisions a future where theatre experiences are a fundamental aspect of children's lives, nourishing their creative spirit, inspiring them to embrace the complexity and diversity of their world, and helping them overcome their challenges with hope, courage and, above all, creativity.”

Where: 4908 Auburn Ave., Bethesda, Md.

How much: $12-$25.

Ages: Best for ages 4 to 10.

More information: www.imaginationstage.org or  (301) 280-1660.

[I recall quite vividly, by the way, an experience I had when I was very young with the magic of theater the production manager talks about above.  I mentioned in a past post (“A Broadway Baby,” 22 September 2010) that when my family spent part of the summer on Cape Cod back in the 1950s, we always went to the Cape Cod Melody Tent in Hyannis at least once during the season.  To this day, I still remember being amazed at a production of The Wizard of Oz when, after the tornado generated by the tech crew with lighting and sound effects, the lights came back up—and there sat Dorothy's house, with the legs of the Wicked Witch sticking out from under one side!   It was impossible!  How did that house get there?  It was, indeed, magic!  I was probably 6 or 7 at the time.

[The production manager, also sometimes called the stage manager (although occasionally there’s both), named in McLaughlin’s article, Bradley Cooper, is not that Bradley Cooper (the popular movie actor).  Bradley C. Cooper’s been Production Manager at Imagination Stage since 2011 and was previously Assistant Stage Operations Supervisor at Washington’s Shakespeare Theatre Company and stage manager at the Virginia Stage Company in Norfolk. Writer and composer Alyn Cardarelli and Steve Goers are creators of the popular musical How I Became a Pirate, adapted from Melinda Long and David Shannon's picture book and staged at Imagination in 2010. Kathryn Chase Bryer is Imagination Stage's Associate Artistic Director. She’s helped develop new scripts and directed over 30 shows in the last 18 years.  Jonathan Atkinson was last seen at Imagination Stage as the Prince in Rapunzel and has been seen in the Kennedy Center's national tours of The Phantom Tollbooth and Roald Dahl's Willy Wonka. Justine Moral was last seen at Imagination Stage as Lucy in The Lion, The Witch & The Wardrobe, which received five Helen Hayes Award nominations, and she has performed in national tours of South Pacific and Les Miserables.  James Konicek is a well-known voice artist in the Washington area, recently recording a series of national radio ads for GEICO.  He’s performed in many District-area productions, most recently Our Town (Ford's Theatre, Washington) and A Trip to the Moon (Synetic Theater, Arlington, Va.). Michael John Casey has performed in several shows at Imagination Stage, including the Helen Hayes-nominated The Lion, The Witch & The Wardrobe and Rapunzel. Angela Miller is a graduate of Washington’s American University.]

*  *  *  *

“INCONSTANT MOON? NO PROBLEM”
by CHARLES ISHERWOOD

[This article was originally published in a section called “Playing Outside The Box” in the New York Times on 19 July 2013 (sec. C [“Weekend Arts II”]).] 

To say I am not an avid outdoorsman is a gross understatement. From my perspective, civilization as we know it dates to the invention of air-conditioning, and the whole point of living in New York City is the opportunity it affords to bypass nature completely and its many discomforts and outright perils.

So you might conclude that Shakespeare in the Park, the beloved summer institution created by Joseph Papp and going strong some 50 years later, would have me grumbling about bugs, heat, rain and a paranoid fear of falling tree limbs. (Not so paranoid, that, which is why I remain immune to the vaunted charms of Central Park.) I’ll cop to some resistance born of unhappy experiences, like the insufferably muggy night that I sweltered through “The Skin of Our Teeth,” and a performance of “The Merchant of Venice” that stretched until midnight after the skies opened midway through the first act, necessitating a 45-minute pause during which the audience huddled under the theater’s narrow eaves.

But I have come to appreciate – even look forward to – the undeniable pleasures of the experience, particularly in recent years, as the Public Theater has raised its Shakespeare productions to a generally high standard. The comedies in which natural realms are benign, healing influences play particularly well outdoors. Having a real forest (or what can pass for one) portray the role of the Forest of Arden in “As You Like It” sweetens the atmosphere of that play. Ditto “A Midsummer Night’s Dream,” wherein the heart’s confusions are sorted out as the lovers tear through the woods surrounding Athens. I have no idea what the shores of Illyria were like, but watching “Twelfth Night” unsheltered by protective covering helps usher us into the experience of the play’s shipwrecked characters.
 
Seeing Shakespeare outdoors turns the playgoing experience into something more elemental and primal than it usually is, reminding us that this art form was born in outdoor auditoriums in ancient Greece and flourished anew during Shakespeare’s day at theaters like the Globe, which were not enclosed spaces, either. The lesser folk – groundlings – who stood to watch performances at the Globe would brave whatever weather came their way. They still do today at the facsimile constructed on the South Bank of the Thames – a hugely successful enterprise.

And, for many, seeing Shakespeare outdoors frees it from the suffocating air of elitism – or cultural homework – that can often cling to it. The most responsive audiences I’ve ever been a part of have been those at the Delacorte, most of whom, I suspect, are not regular theatergoers punching a cultural ticket, but people who simply come because it’s free and it’s fun – an unbeatable combination. Attending Shakespeare in the Park feels more like going to a baseball game, where you expect to be engrossed but are free from the threat of edification. Many of the more high-minded, assiduous (and deep-pocketed) theater lovers I know shrug and demur when urged to go see something at the Delacorte; they can’t be bothered to stand in line to score a ticket.

These days, more often than not, it’s their loss. (Unless Al Pacino happens to be involved, in which case they can placidly wait for the transfer to Broadway.) Having been charmed by the first offering this summer, a buoyant, 1940s-set production of “The Comedy of Errors,” I am excited to see the second, which begins Tuesday: a new musical adaptation of “Love’s Labour’s Lost,” featuring songs written by Michael Friedman, the house composer of the enterprising young company the Civilians.

So consider me a convert, a cheerleader, even a proselytizer at times. And since I live downtown, attending Shakespeare in the Park performances brings an added benefit. I visit the Upper East Side almost as infrequently as I go hiking. (Yes, it’s happened on rare occasions, and I’ve spent the whole time fearing ticks and rock slides.) A 15-minute stroll from the Delacorte brings me to one of the best bars in the city, Bemelman’s at the Carlyle Hotel, where I can ponder the merits of the performance with a martini at hand, while savoring the fundamental pleasure of being safely indoors again.

[While I generally agree with Charles Isherwood’s assessment of the outdoor-theater experience, I have some reservations about the way he feels that being outside during the performance of plays like As You Like It or A Midsummer Night’s Dream enhances the understanding of the play.  Frankly, I think he’s copped to the hype of outdoor theater.  (Isherwood makes a point that the original Globe Theatre was open to the elements, which is true—but only so far as the sky was concerned.  Like most theaters in Elizabethan times, the Globe, on the south bank of the Thames, was not in a sylvan setting, surrounded by nature, but in the city of London.  Furthermore, Shakespeare’s plays were also performed at the King’s Men’s winter home, Blackfriars, which was indoors and entirely enclosed.)   Nonetheless, the facts of Isherwood’s description are basically true even if you quibble with the repercussions.]


05 September 2013

'Washington Art Matters'


The American University Museum at the Katzen Arts Center, a gallery my mom and I used to visit periodically because it’s right near where she used to live, spotlighted the art of my hometown this summer.  Five exhibitions featuring works by Washington artists opened 15 June and closed 11 August.  I only caught one show, Washington Art Matters: 1940s-1980s, a comprehensive exhibit of about 80 artists, occupying the entire third floor of the AU Museum, that told the story of art made in the Capital over five decades (starting just before I was born, as it happens).  This was reportedly the first significant endeavor by a museum to present a comprehensive retrospective of the District’s most prominent artists.  The exhibition, which Mom, two friends, and I saw two days before it closed, was based on Washington Art Matters: Art Life in the Capital 1940-1990, a book published in June by the Washington Arts Museum, a recently-closed organization dedicated to the presentation and promotion of the city’s art and art history, and co-authored by Jean Lawlor Cohen, Benjamin Forgey, Sidney Lawrence, and Elizabeth Tebow. 

As I wrote in my report “Art in D.C. (Dec. ’09-Jan. ’10),” 18 January 2010: “[S]ince at least the post-World War II years, the Nation’s Capital has been a true art center.  Not only have the big museums . . . long been important venues for displaying and viewing art of many cultures and eras, but Washington had long had a vibrant retail gallery presence. . . . .  But all of these facts aren’t what made Washington an art center.  That would be the community of artists, some native Washingtonians . . ., others born elsewhere but drawn to the active art scene there.”  Washington, though, was an unlikely place for an art center to blossom: aside from its innate conservative taste (which the emerging artists soon challenged and quickly exploded), the book’s authors point out: “Despite a number of optimistic gallery owners, the city had no bohemian neighborhood, no cafes or coffee houses to pull the artists and their patrons, no gathering places for a subculture during the war.”  By the start of the next decade, however, “all the elements for a Washington art community were in place.  The city had commercial galleries and a growing, albeit low-profile, base of collectors.  It had an academic center—American University—providing a regional presence and a link to the national scene.  But most importantly, Washington had a critical mass of brashly confident free spirits.” 

Most of the painters and sculptors of that culture are represented by at least (and largely) one work in AU’s Washington Art Matters (including several who’ve showed up in some of my past blog reports).  Despite a few notable sculptures (Ann Truitt most prominently), some “constructions” (Yuriko Yamaguchi's Water and Dream, 1989) and several photographs (Sally Mann and a handful of others), the exhibit is clearly “a painter’s showcase,” as O’Sullivan of the Washington Post observed, because, he asserted, “Washington has traditionally been a painting town.”  Neither the AU exhibit nor the WAM book claim to be comprehensive; the AU Museum has computers placed around the galleries inviting visitors to type in the names of artists whom they think should have been included but weren’t, and the authors of the book’s preface baldly state, “No doubt many artists, institutions and events have been missed, although they deserve mention.”  Nonetheless, both the book and the show made the point that, even in Washington’s segregated society before the mid-’50s, the city’s largely African-American population contributed greatly to the art scene, with many successful black-owned galleries (including the Barnett-Aden Gallery, the subject of John Nathaniel Robinson’s 1947 painting First Gallery, displayed in the show) and important African-American artists (aside from Robinson, others on exhibit at AU included Lois Mailou Jones, Alma Thomas, Sylvia Snowden, Jeff Donaldson, Allen “Big Al” Carter, Martin Puryear, Sam Gilliam, and Michael Platt).

Though the AU Museum mounts many exhibits of work from all around the country and the globe (a sixth show at the Katzen showcased a San Francisco artist), it’s known for showing local art, something director and curator Jack Rasmussen initiated when the museum opened in 2005.  (The other four exhibits in the series were Kitty Klaidman: Beneath the Surface, which highlighted recent mixed media paintings by the Washington artist; Nan Montgomery: Opposite and Alternate, consisting of the artist’s recent oil paintings; Raya Bodnarchuk: Form, spotlighting sculptures by the influential mentor in Washington art for 40 years; and Tim Tate: Sleep Walker, which featured video installations by the District’s best known contemporary glass artist, as well as collaborations with Pete Duvall, a Washington photographer, and Richard Schellenberg, a painter, sculptor, and video artist in the city.) 

“Museums were not showing Washington art except on very rare occasions,” Rasmussen said in a May interview with American, the American University magazine.  (The Washington Show, a 1985 exhibit at the Corcoran Gallery of Art, was one such rarity.)  “It’s important to have local artists on your side,” added Rasmussen.  “They support you, they talk to their friends, the friends come, and all this makes it possible to have a scene in which people want to participate.”  (In the mid- and late ’50s, as I’ve reported before, my parents were partners in a small art gallery in Washington, and the managing partner was adamant about not letting it become a “Washington gallery.”  As a result, she turned down exhibits by some artists who became highly regarded, such as Kenneth Noland and Morris Louis, one of each of whose canvases were included in Washington Art Matters.).

According to John Anderson of Washington City Paper, Rasmussen got wind last year of the planned publication of WAM’s Washington Art Matters and the authors gave the director-curator a list of the artists to be covered in the book.  He opened a gap in the Katzen’s exhibition schedule and went about assembling the samples for an AU show paralleling the book.  The AU Museum already owned about a third of the works in the prospective show, so Rasmussen started borrowing the rest from private collections and three large museums in Washington, putting the exhibit together in less than 10 weeks, which may account for a cobbled-together feel.  In a way, however, this also made AU’s Washington Art Matters a doubly Washingtonian show—the artists have lived and worked in the District and the art on exhibit came from local sources, too. 

Anderson quoted the Washington Post’s Paul Richard on the 1985 Corcoran show: “Any show so varied, it is bound to leave a blur,” adding that AU’s Washington Art Matters “pursues the same mission” and therefore encountered the same drawback.  Anderson thought the exhibit felt like an eclectic art auction, and I can’t disagree.  To try to cover half a century of one region’s artistic creativity (or, really, any human endeavor) is asking for a blurry, unfocused outcome: individual elements may be interesting, even stunning, but the overall experience is bound to be a little like herding cats.  If you make each cat a different color and breed, you get an idea what viewing Washington Art Matters was like.  My father used to say of the popular restaurant meal back in the day, the mixed grill, that it had too much of some things and not enough of anything; that’s a bit like what Washington Art Matters was like.  Not that the effort was unworthy (as I’ll try to explain shortly).

Rasmussen’s Washington Art Matters, a title whose double entendre I rather like, both for the book and for the exhibit, is divided vaguely into three sections: a small gallery (with a long tail) of works from the 1940s and ’50s; a larger, quasi-circular space with art from the later ’50s and, mostly, the 1960s; and, over the bridge-like ramps across the gap of the museum’s atrium (a gulf between the Vietnam and pre-Vietnam turbulence and the post-Watergate wildness?), into the 1970s and ’80s.  If some sort of developmental timeline was Rasmussen’s aim, it was subverted by the fact that when we got off the elevator on the third floor, more-or-less directly in front of us was a view of Gene Davis's untitled 1966 canvas of vertical rainbow-colored stripes and, across that gallery but still in sight as we stepped away from the elevator door, Morris Louis’s vertically dripped, bright-colored stains and Kenneth Noland’s equally colorful op-art bull’s-eye target.  (For a report on a Louis show and a mention of Noland’s work, see “Morris Louis,” 15 February 2010, and “Picasso, Bearden, Gilliam, and Gauguin,” 26 June 2011.)  To start the exhibition at its chronological beginning, we had to make a sharp right turn to view a small wall displaying a little collection of works from the 1940s, including an abstract geometric print by Jacob Kainen and a serene, black-and-white linoleum-block print by Lila Asher, a woman my mother’s known since they were at summer camp together as children.  (My parents also knew Kainen, but not well.  I own a Kainen print and both my mom and I own an Asher; both artists specialized in printmaking.)  These artists are among those Jean Lawlor Cohen calls “The Old Guard.”

Following the chronology of the layout, as my friend Rich did, the works of the 1950s trailed off to the left of the elevators in a long, narrow gallery where Marjorie Phillips’s Night Baseball (1951), a very literal painting of a ballgame with which I wasn’t familiar, was on display.  The artist was the wife of Duncan Phillips, the man who founded the Phillips Collection, and I wondered if the baseball diamond depicted might have been the old Griffith Stadium, home of the original Washington Senators ball club (subject of Damn Yankees).  I found out later, on a website of the Phillips Collection (which loaned the painting to AU) that not only does the painting depict Griffith Stadium, but the game in progress is the Nats playing the hated New York Yankees (“Joltin’ Joe” is at the plate)—an iconic match-up!  (Hey, maybe that game was the inspiration for Damn Yankees, which, after all, opened on Broadway only four years later.)

It was easy, however, to keep walking up the ramp from the ’40s works into the larger space that housed the art of 1970s and ’80s or peel off into the 1960s (pulled in by the extremely colorful and enticing Noland, Davis, and Louis canvases I mentioned).  If that happened, as it did to my mother and Sallie, the other friend who was with us, you lose any progression Rasmussen wanted to demonstrate, any sense that one generation of Washington artist fed the next or was nurtured by the previous one.  “[V]isual artists stand on the shoulders of other artists,” observed F. Lennox Campello, an artist, art dealer, and critic (and author of 100 Artists of Washington, D.C.) who blogs at Daily Campello Art News.  Artistic lineage—how the baton of tradition is passed on at times and then rejected and replaced at others—is one of the show’s sub-themes,” asserted O’Sullivan in the Post, though I can’t say I caught it in the gallimaufry of works in AU’s Washington Art Matters. 

Also in the ’50s-’60s gallery was Stair (1977—yeah, the chronology gets a little . . . ummm, creative), one of Sam Gilliam’s draped hangings; an earlier Davis (Black Flowers, 1952, with elongated vertical stem-like abstractions topped with red-and-white puffs); Pietro Lazzari’s Bull (c. 1950), a thick application of “concrete” into which the artist incised the abstract silhouette of a raging bull; and one of Anne Truitt’s glossily painted, minimalist wooden-tower sculptures (this one in silver gray).  “There’s lots to look at in this gallery,” remarked O’Sullivan.  (For a report on work by Gilliam, see “Picasso, Bearden, Gilliam, and Gauguin,” and for a brief discussion of Truitt’s art, see “Art in D.C. (Dec. ’09-Jan. ’10),” both mentioned above.)  The Post writer called these Washington Color School pieces “iconic” works, and for me they were the most salient works and artists in the exhibition, but that may just be because some of those artists’ work is among my favorite of modern art.  It may also be that this gallery alone, as City Paper’s Anderson pointed out, presented “a coherent sense of identity or movement happening in D.C.” because during that period, “seemingly every artist in Washington was under the spell of Abstract Expressionism and the so-called Washington Color School.  After that, District art hopped all over the map.” 

(In the late ’50s through the mid-’60s, Morris Louis with other Washington artists like Kenneth Noland and Gene Davis, all of whom have canvases in Washington Art Matters, helped develop what became known as Color Field painting—simultaneously establishing the Washington Color School, a name that, like Impressionism, was taken from the title of an exhibition.  The principal tenet of the colorists was to cover their canvases with unified blocks of bright, pure colors.  Like abstract painters, with whom the colorists shared many parallels, Color Field painters rejected the representation of identifiable figures.  In addition, colorists also eschewed symbolism in art, feeling that even abstract forms distracted viewers from experiencing the pure color.  There weren’t supposed to be any subjective, emotional connotations in the hues or forms on the canvas.  Red was just a color, not an expression of passion.  The painting was just art, nothing more meaningful or symbolic.  It was all supposed to come to a pure sensation of enjoyment.  The focus on purity of form strongly links Color Field painting with Minimalist art—as we see in the work of Anne Truitt.  Louis, for instance, pared his paintings down to just what he felt was necessary, the bare minimum to create his effects.)

Hopping all over the map was openly demonstrated in the last gallery of AU’s Washington Art Matters which focused on the District’s art scene of the ’70s and ’80s.  The media employed as well as the subjects and the styles, not to mention the creative dynamic and the points being made by the artists, weren’t emblematic of just a herd of cats—but cats on PCP.  Like the pop music that started after 1975 or so, the art from that era on began to appeal to me less and less.  (Okay, I’m not just a geezer, I’m a reactionary geezer.  So, sue me!)  Not much in this gallery affected me—it was all mostly a matter of curiosity.  The most interesting piece in this collection was among the half dozen or so photographs: one by Sally Mann.  I’m not much of a fan of art photography, but Mann, whose work has been controversial as well as praised since she made the scene in the mid- and late ’70s, is known to me because she was a teenaged townie when I was in college.  (Her mother ran the university book store.  By the time I was a junior and senior, Mann began dating some of my younger schoolmates—it’s a small school—so I knew who she was.)  I had no idea she was considered a Washington artist, though.  Mann’s from Virginia, where she still lives with her family, but not the D.C. suburbs across the Potomac; she’s from central Virginia, the Shenandoah Valley.  (Benjamin Forgey, in the WAM book, suggests that the Washington metropolitan region should include the Shenandoah Valley and other areas far from the city’s immediate suburbs, but Rasmussen didn’t make such a stretch notable in his AU display.)  I was surprised to see her work included in Washington Art Matters, but I’m no authority.  (I guess that’s obvious, isn’t it?)

Nonetheless, the exhibition was worth having been mounted and having seen.  As Campello, the art blogger, advised art students and gallery directors, “[T]ake the opportunity to visit and learn about our area's visual arts footprint.”  (He also strenuously recommended his fellow artists see the show.  “[T]his is Washington . . .,” he admonished local artists, “so go and pay homage to your predecessors.”)  I knew that D.C. had an art life—because I’m a hometown chauvinist and my family’s been involved on the fringes of the Washington art community (after the gallery ownership, my dad became involved in the private precursor of what’s now the National Museum of African Art in the ’60s and ’70s, then he served as a docent at the National Portrait Gallery through the ’80s into the early ’90s; my mother’s still friendly with Lila Asher and Sam Gilliam) most of my life—but a lot of people, including a lot of Capital-area residents, have no idea.  At AU’s Washington Art Matters, I was surprised at how many of the artists’ names I didn’t recognize—and I mean even before the mid-’70s.  That’s me, the Washington chauvinist, like I said.  I knew this world existed—I just didn’t know as much about it as I thought I did! 

Washington has always had a sort of inferiority complex; Anderson wrote about D.C.’s sense of competition with New York over the significance of its indigenous art, but that’s not what I mean.  While I was growing up in Washington, there was little sense that the city was a true community, with a municipal character unique to itself and a cultural life of its own, not something connected to or derived from the federal government.  Before his short stint as a Foreign Service Officer, my dad ran an ordinary business, the kind every city and town has (he operated movie theaters); the parents of all my friends were in the same line—doctors, dentists, vets, lawyers, shoe store-owners, builders, liquor importers, factory-owners, even some farmers (because back then there were still family farms in Maryland and Virginia just outside the city).  To all of us, Washington was just our home city—but to everyone else, including many of the kids I went to school with (politician’s kids, military brats, children of foreign diplomats), Washington was the “capital of the United States,” the seat of government, not a real town.  We had poor restaurants, little in the way of theater, a losing joke of a baseball team (Washington: “First in war, first in peace, and last in the American League!”) that even left town in 1960.  People traveled out of town to shop for clothes and we even had to go to Baltimore for deli.  (Assignment to Washington was not considered a plumb posting for foreign diplomats.  It was a backwater.  The book quotes one art dealer who arrived from France in 1945: “Washington was a village.  Cows were grazing on Georgia Avenue.”)  It took until the 1980s for Washington to grow into a real community, establishing itself at the same time as a cultural center.  But the fact that through all that time, there was an indigenous and vibrant art world in the District meant that real people did live there, that Washingtonians made things other than laws and bureaucratic rules.  The decades covered by WAM’s book and AU’s exhibit “bracket the evolution of Washington, D.C.’s art identity,” assert the book’s authors.

It’s high time Washingtonians and everyone else knew about this part of my native city.  That, Mr. Rasmussen, is more than worthy of a major art exhibit.  (It would be great, and really interesting, if a show devoted to Washington-area artists were mounted in New York and maybe traveled to cities like L.A. and Chicago.)  Even if the show is messy and unfocused artistically, without a clear aesthetic message, many of the artists in the show are good and quite a few are even great.  When I visited Quebec some years ago and then Vancouver, I made a point of going to the museums that were dedicated to the local art.  Both collections were mediocre at best, uninspiring—even the Québécois, who are more French than the French, didn’t inherit the art gene from their Old World forebears.  I mean, name three world-famous Canadian artists.  Okay, name one . . . .  That’s not a problem in Washington—you can name famous D.C. artists—it’s just that most people don’t know that’s where they’re from.  There wasn’t a damn thing wrong with the art on the AU walls—this wasn’t a bad art show; the problem was only that there were too many trees to see the forest.  But the mere fact that there was a Washington Art Matters is laudable and beneficial.  Not that either the book on which the exhibit was based nor the American University show was didactic—the book is dubbed “conversational” by Anderson.  In O’Sullivan’s words, Washington Art Matters was “an attempt to tell the story—make that the stories—of a city’s art scene, from the musty if modernist old guard to the funky vanguard”—and a most welcome one.  The city needed it, and the world needed it.  As Campello put it: “[T]hank you to American University Museum Director Jack Rasmussen, whose drive and insight and skill shows and demonstrates what a museum can do to become . . . a key part of a city.”

Washington Art Matters: Art Life in the Capital 1940-1990 (available from the AU Museum Shop and Amazon.com, but not at ordinary bookstores, including Barnes & Noble or The Strand) represents the final project of the Washington Arts Museum, a curatorial institution that, since its inception in 1999, mounted exhibits of work by significant, perhaps neglected, regional artists.  ”The focus of almost all the museums within the city is not local,” says the now-defunct non-profit’s website.  As part of its mission, WAM has documented Washington’s artistic history in audiotaped interviews and videotaped panel discussions with artists, curators, gallery directors, and others in the city’s art scene.  (The tapes and other WAM archival materials have been turned over to the Smithsonian Archives of American Art.)  WAM founders Renee Butler and Giorgio Furioso see the book, which covers the years of WAM’s primary focus, as a finale to their efforts “to spotlight Washington‘s unique and creative community and history and to provide an alternative to the largely national and international focus of the city’s longstanding private and public art institutions and museums.”   (I stopped in at the Museum Store to have a look at the book and I overheard the clerk explaining to another customer that the creators of Washington Art Matters are planning a sequel which will bring the history of the District of Columbia’s art up to the present, covering the last two decades of local creativity.)  In terms that can also be applied to Rasmussen’s art show at the Katzen, Campello called the book an “intense and important labor of love” and Benjamin Forgey, a former art and architecture critic for the Washington Star  and the Washington Post, dubbed his afterword, “Art Life on the Edges,” “what I would like to be a love letter to Washington as an art city.”  That sort of goes for my report here, too, but I’d call mine a “thank-you note.”

[The gallery my parents bought into in the 1950s was the Gres Gallery, 1729 20th Street, N.W.  I once considered writing an article on the little gallery, but I found a dearth of documentation (though I suppose if I made a research trip to D.C., I’d find some information bearing on its history).  It got a passing mention in Washington Art Matters, however, so in the interest of nostalgia (mine), I’ve decided to append it to my report:

[What most artists wanted even then [the 1950s] was gallery representation, an agent who not only provided space for shows but also promoted sales and kept the books.  Fortunately, the still-active commercial pioneers . . . were joined by a number of new galleries . . . .

[One of the most ambitious was north of Dupont Circle, the Gres Gallery founded by a South American woman named Madame Tanya Gres [this is an error: Mrs. Gres was Spanish and her name was Tana], who soon sold the operation to 10 shareholders putting up $1,000 apiece.  Their manager Mrs. Hart Perry traveled to Europe and South America. Selecting works for first-in-America exhibits, such as oils by “a skinny young artist” named Fernando Botero.

[Although the Gres had little interest in showing local art, it created excitement among collectors who, until then bought only in New York and Chicago.  And it created a social scene—with Larry Rivers, playing jazz piano into the night.  Alice Denney remembers that gallery goers would arrive at her less-endowed operation the Jefferson Place Gallery trailing balloon bouquets from the Gres’s more elaborate openings.

[Gres Gallery was only the second gallery in the U.S. to mount a solo show of Fernando Botero’s work; MoMA bought his Mona Lisa from the Gres show.  It was the first U.S. gallery to exhibit abstract paintings from Poland in Fifteen Polish Painters, a whole show MoMA took to New York.  By the turn of the decade, most of the partners, many of whom were Foreign Service Officers, were transferred out of the country—my own parents went to Germany in 1962—and Gres Gallery closed.  “Helping out” in the gallery—I stuffed envelopes and such—and meeting artists at the vernissages the partners hosted are some of the most vivid and cherished memories of my childhood.  When I hung around the gallery and met some of the artists, none of their names meant anything to me at the time—I just knew they were artists and created the works I saw at the gallery.  I even made collages (cut-out construction paper, to be sure), inspired by a collagist exhibited at the gallery.  The experience provided me with an exciting and eye-opening art education before I was a teenager, and the influence has remained strong ever since.

[By the way, one additional sidelight, concerning Marjorie Phillips’s Night Baseball.  I doubt I was at that Nats-Yankees game—I’d have been four then—but later my dad took me to Griffith Stadium.  More significant, at least in terms of my memories, is the fact that Clare Griffith, the daughter of Calvin Griffith, owner of the Senators for whose adoptive father, Clark, the stadium was named, was a classmate in middle school.  I remember we got to listen to an occasional game on the radio in class, but I don’t think that was because of Griffith’s influence—Sidwell Friends School didn’t work that way—but we had an outing to a Nats game in the spring and there was also a pool party for the whole class at the Griffith’s home while Clare was at Sidwell as well.  (Calvin Griffith was the Branch Rickey of Washington.  He didn’t integrate the Senators, but he took our home team away, moving it Minnesota after the 1960 season where they became the Twins.  I lost interest in baseball at about that same time—but I don’t recall that that was a result of Griffith’s betrayal.  (I went away to school in ’61 and then abroad in ’63.  When I got to college, I did manage the ball team for two season.)]