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READING PASSAGE 8
Museums of fine art and their public
The fact that people go to the Louvre museum in Paris to see the original painting Mona Lisa when they
can see a reproduction anywhere leads us to question some assumptions about the role of museums of fine
art in today’s world
One of the most famous works of art in the world is Leonardo da Vinci’s Mona Lisa. Nearly everyone who
goes to see the original will already be familiar with it from reproductions, but they accept that fine art is more
rewardingly viewed in its original form.
However, if Mona Lisa was a famous novel, few people would bother to go to a museum to read the writer’s
actual manuscript rather than a printed reproduction. This might be explained by the
fact that the novel has
evolved precisely because of technological developments that made it possible to print out huge numbers of
texts, whereas oil paintings have always been produced as unique objects. In addition, it could be argued that
the practice of interpreting or ‘reading’ each medium follows different conventions. With novels, the reader
attends mainly to the meaning of words rather than the way they are printed on the page, whereas the ‘reader’
of a painting must attend just as closely to the material form of marks and shapes in the picture as to any ideas
they may signify.
Yet it has always been possible to make very accurate facsimiles of pretty well any fine art work. The seven
surviving versions of Mona Lisa bear witness to the fact that in the 16th century,
artists seemed perfectly
content to assign the reproduction of their creations to their workshop apprentices as regular ‘bread and butter’
work. And today the task of reproducing pictures is incomparably more simple and reliable, with reprographic
techniques that allow the production of high-quality prints made exactly to the original scale, with faithful
colour values, and even with duplication of the surface relief of the painting.
But despite an implicit recognition that the spread of good reproductions can be culturally valuable, museums
continue to promote the special status of original work.
Unfortunately, this seems to place severe limitations on the kind of experience offered to visitors.
One limitation is related to the way the museum presents its exhibits. As repositories of unique historical
objects, art museums are often called ‘treasure houses’. We are reminded of this even before we view a
collection by the
presence of security guards, attendants, ropes and display cases to keep us away from the
exhibits. In many cases, the architectural style of the building further reinforces that notion. In addition,
a major collection like that of London’s National Gallery is housed in numerous rooms, each with dozens of
works, any one of which is likely to be worth more than all the average visitor possesses. In a society that
judges the personal status of the individual so
much by their material worth, it is therefore difficult not to be
impressed by one’s own relative ‘worthlessness’ in such an environment.
Furthermore, consideration of the ‘value’ of the original work in its treasure house setting impresses upon the
viewer that, since these works were originally produced, they have been assigned a huge monetary value by
some person or institution more powerful than themselves. Evidently, nothing the viewer thinks about the
work is going to alter that value, and so today’s viewer is deterred from trying to extend that spontaneous,
immediate, self-reliant kind of reading which would originally have met the work.
The visitor may then be struck by the strangeness of seeing
such diverse paintings, drawings and sculptures
brought together in an environment for which they were not originally created. This ‘displacement effect’ is
further heightened by the sheer volume of exhibits. In the case of a major collection, there are probably more
works on display than we could realistically view in weeks or even months.
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This is particularly distressing because time seems to be a vital factor in the appreciation of all art forms.
A fundamental difference between paintings and other art forms is that there is no prescribed time over which
a painting is viewed. By contrast, the audience encourage an opera or a play over a specific time, which is
the duration of the performance. Similarly novels and poems
are read in a prescribed
temporal sequence, whereas a picture has no clear place at which to start viewing, or at which to finish. Thus
art works themselves encourage us to view them superficially, without appreciating the richness of detail
and labour that is involved.
Consequently, the dominant critical approach becomes that of the art historian, a specialised
academic approach devoted to ‘discovering the meaning’ of art within the cultural context of its time. This is in
perfect harmony with the museum s function, since the approach is dedicated to
seeking out and conserving
‘authentic’, original, readings of the exhibits. Again, this seems to put paid to that spontaneous, participators
criticism which can be found in abundance in criticism of classic works of literature, but is absent from most
art history.
The displays of art museums serve as a warning of what critical practices can emerge when spontaneous
criticism is suppressed. The museum public,
like any other audience, experience art more rewardingly when
given the confidence to express their views. If appropriate works of fine art could be rendered permanently
accessible to the public by means of high-fidelity reproductions, as literature and music already are, the public
may feel somewhat less in awe of them. Unfortunately, that may be too much to ask from those
who seek to maintain and control the art establishment.