Page Eight THE MICHIGAN DAILY Saturday, April.1 1, 1970 Page Eight THE MICHIGAN DAILY Saturday, April 11, 1970 on plastic Kenneth Coutts-Smith, THE DREAM OF ICARUS: ART AND SOCIETY IN THE TWENTIE- TH CENTURY, George Brazil- ler, 1970, $5.95. By DIANE KIRKPATRICK "In a way one can say there is no such thing as the twentieth century. It is a sort of pot-hole in the path of evolution, and we poor creatures here below are busily trying to scramble out of the nineteenth century'into the twenty-first." The pot-hole pre- sumably was created by explos- ions of theories and discoveries in all fields which blasted c o m- fortable patterns of thought and perception which had been in force since the Renaissance. Psychology and psychiatry re- arranged our perspective on the mental and emotional worlds within, while science gradually eroded traditional concepts of stable matter in a mechanical universe. "Matter is no longer solid and immutable, indeed to- day is seems not even to be composed of waves and particles, of wavicles, but rather of bund- les. of ab'stract events, possibly discontinuous and finally u n - knowable." Thus, Coutts-Smith places us firmly in an age of transition. The present pressures force us to look to the future. Man -dreams of a better society ahead - but this time it is "the dream of Icarus": "When- Prometheus grasped fire from heaven,he wished to steal the power of the Gods for man-Icarus, more proud, aspired to join their com- pany as an equal." There's a new world coming, and man must change to be a part of it. "The human species is possibly facing.the biggest challenge he ever' has had since he began to socialize himself . . Can he adapt now to the implications of his own machinery Can he alter his society and if need be his psyche to meet the technology he has produced." "No organism wishes to mutate. It only does so when it is forc- ed to by the final whip of evo- lutionary selection. Change or die." Change is coming. Revo- lution is in the air. It is reflect- ed in society and in the arts. Especially is it found among the young and the avant-garde (who intuitively understand). These youths have a' separate visn from their elders: a true generation gap spawned by the blast without the sense of fu- ture common to most of those who matured before that histori- cal and psychological watershed. The first part of Coutts- Smith's sprawling text is devot- ed to a potted history of the background and development of present-day student radicalism. In chapter 5, the author slips in his first definite, but tangential, ' reference to art - American Abstract Expressionism and its aftermath. He returns immed- iately to his study of the Beat generation and the rise of a new "religion" which mixes equal parts of "white Negro," "white Indian," drugs, Zen, rit- ual, and psychodrama. Th e author's rationale for this leng- thy rehash of material found in more depth in many other plac- es is that art and society a r e inextricably intermixed on all levels and "to arrive at a n y conclusions regarding the cur- rent overall state of the f i n e arts in advanced technological countries. we must first exam- ine the self-consciously revolu- tionary underground of the arts" (and of the underground soc- ial radicalism which springs from the same roots). We are introduced briefly to most aspects of art and society in the technological West in the twentieth century. However, the balance between the treatment of art and its environment is uneven. As an art critic, Coutts- Smith was already supremely at home in the art scene when he undertook the book. One senses that he researched the various facets of society rather thoroughly. Many of the most- expanded sections show inten- sive, information-gathering. Of- ten the reader feels the author was tempted by the excitement of "new" ideas to overbalance his text in their favor by com- k s wings. of the experiencing of the self and the other-than-self, while minimal art and related styles concentrate on the essence of the art object itself. Personally, Coutts-Smith favors the art of the "other tradition" - the Da- da-Romaniticist one - feeling it is the current art capable of engendering change. Most of the text deals with aspects of this "other tradition," although there are nodding references to works on the other side of the ideolo- gical-stylistic fence too. The rich diversity of artis- tic expression in our century lends excitement to the age- and, ultimately, confusion to the book's text. The author seems to have evolved his struc- ture by using a scatter-gun tech- nique on all the ideas which interest him. He attacks s u b - jects in apparently random or- der and arbitrary depth. In writing a book of this type, there is always a- further prob- lem of organization: do you choose a few representative ar- tists and let the reader take on faith your wide acquaint- ance with the whole field, or do you prove your erudition by sprinkling name s, however a c u t e 1 y, throughout. Coutts.: Smith attempts to do both, which heightens reader confus- ion. (For most American read- ers, the mixed approach to. the whole field of British art, muc of which is underpublicized here, will be frustrating. The frustra- tion is not mitigated by the small black-and-white illustra- tions which illustrate some of the artistic ideas discussed.) One wants a much tighter structure. The book is, in effect, a sprawling collection of frag- mentary ideas which s o m e- times intermingle alarmingly. However, despite the flabby structure which calls on the reader for extraordinary feats of extraction and synthesis, the book is well worth reading. It is a dense,suggestive compend- ium of ideas with voluminous quotes from a wide variety of sources which spur further ex- ploration. It is also good to be repeatedly challenged by the musings of a socially conscious art critic on the place of art in the new world he believes must come. His closing lines sum up his attitude toward art in the present and toward its future possibilities:. "And art? What has art got to do with all this? .. . We seem to have lost the faculty of using it as a common ac- tivity, as a way of sharing our experience of the universe. Sartre has commented that one of the chief motives of artistic creation is certain- ly the need of feeling that we are essential in relationship to the world.' But we do not have this feeling . . . Perhaps we can regain it with a re-order- ing of society; but what sort of art will we have then? -.- It may well be a form that we Renaissance - orientated peo- ple won't recognize at all -. - What it must be though, if it is to be art, and what we seem to have. lost in, the painting and sculpture of our imme- diately contemporary scene, is a spiritual quality that speaks to both man as an individual and to man as a member of a collective." Charles Osborne, GIUSEPPE VERDI: HIS LIFE AND WORKS, Alfred Knopf, 1970, $10 00. By ALLAN R. KEILER Charles Osborne, one of the young British writers on music, is also a devoted and enthusi- astic champion of Verdi and has produced a book about that com- poser, The Complete Operas of Verdi. It is, in fact. the first comprehensive study of Verdi's complete operatic oeuvre in any language since Francis Toye's pioneering work, Guseppe Ver- di: His Life and Works, written in 1931. Osborne's book does not advance the work of Toye in any significant respect, but he has had the benefit of the igreat revival of interest in early Verdi and the lesser known works of Verdi's middle period. It is, therefore, for these reasons alone, a welcome addition to the Verdi bibliography. Each of Verdi's twenty-six operas, presented chronological- ly, is given a chapter and there is a final chapter devoted to his non-operatic works. Every opera is treated fully in four parts: a biographical introductory part, sources and progress of the li- bretto, a detailed plot summary with plentiful reference to im- portant musical sections, and including many musical ex- amples, and finally a musical analysis and judgment of the opera. Osborne's book is, there- fore, more than just a series of descriptions of Verdi's operatic plots, but a kind of operatic biography of the composer. The reader will find the mid- dle parts of Osborne's book the most interesting and useful. The biographical commentary i s short and merely sets the stage for the operatic work to be con- sidered. There is nothing here that cannotbe found easily in any standard biography of Ver- di. Osborne is apparently some- what self-conscious about this, and devotes considerable discus- sion to such controversial ques- tions as the possible existence of an early opera Rochester, perhaps destroyed by the com- poser, and King Lear, an opera which Verdi always intended to write and whose libretto synop- sis he kept in his study until his death. Unfortunately, Os- borne has really nothing new to add to these questions. In the case of Rochester he concludes, without giving any evidence, that such an bpera did, in fact exist. In the discussion of Lear Osborne again dispenses with Today's Wriers ... Allan R. R. Keiler is As- sociate Professor of Linguis- tics at the University; he stu- died piano with Alicia De Larrocha in Barcelona and has gathered together an out- standing collection of rare opera performances on tape. Diane Kirkpatrick, an Assist- tant Professor in the History of Art Department, offers r opular courses in twentieth century art history. Sculptor, painter, jack-of-all-arts Ri- chard Turner has taught and studied in India and has erected many sculptural at- tractions in Ann Arbor parks; he presently is holding an "aesthetic exploration of the Union" in the Union base- ment. evidence, and substitutes con- jecture for argument: He says in one paragraph, "I sometimes wonder if any of Verdi's Lear- Cordelia sketches made their way into the music for Boc- canegra . . " (pg. 81). In the next, he concludes with "I have already suggested the possibility of Lear music having found its way into Simon Boccanegra...". On the other hand, the second part of each chapter, which deals with the libretto of the opera, is extraordinarily reveal- ing about Verdis working meth- ods and his intense preoccupa- tion with the, dramatic values of his works. Verdi was primarily concerned with human passions and emotions, i.e. opera and hu- man drama, and was therefore closer in spirit to Gluck and even Monteverdi and the early the exact kind of verses which he required to heighten the dramatic tension of a given scene. Often Verdi simply had to write them himself, as in the duet "O terra, addio" from Aida. In the last section of each chapter, where he provides a musical analysis of the opera, Osborne is less successful. This is, of course, the most difficult kind of musical exposition to write, since any formal and de- tailed musical analysis would be out of place in this kind of work. The danger, however, is to slip into metaphorical language in order to avoid technical termin- ology. Perhaps metaphor, be- cause of its convenience and universality, is to a large extent unavoidable in talking about music, but it is also imprecise and confusing. Osborne has happily avoided metaphorical description almost entirely but has put in its place common- place and uninformative de- scriptive vocabulary. When Os- b o r n e describes Azucena's "Stride la vampa" as "simple and effective," the Amelia- Gabriele duet as "charming and elegant," and countless other examples as merely "interest- ing" or "dramatic," the more knowledgeable reader is merely put off and the layman unim- pressed. Nor is it informative to com- pare Verdi's compositional tech- niques to countless other com- posers on the basis of super- ficial orchestral or melodic de- vices. In the course of some fifty pages, Verdi is likened, in this manner, to Mozart, Beethoven, Offenbach, Bellini, Spohr, Men-, delssohn, Schubert, Tchaikov- sky, Moussorgsky, and Meyer- beer. The list is not complete. When Osborne provides most careful and informative analy- sis, it is frequently simplistic and unsupported. In discussing, e.g., Dorrado's aria "Tutto par-, ea sorridere" from Il Corsaro, he says that it "is not only beautiful, but, when Verdi gives the tune to the strings while the voice punctuates the melody with short phrases of recitative, interesting and unusual as well," (pg. 184). One would like to know why this is interesting - is this device used in a different fashion here than elsewhere? It is, furthermore, not unusual but extremely common in Verdi, one of his most characteristic mu- sical devices, and one could give a plethora of examples - the opening scene of Act II of Rigo- letto between Rigoletto and Sparafucile. the scene between Amneris and the priests in Act IV of Aida, portions of Lady Macbeth's sleepwalking scene, and so on. The concluding sections are often irritating because of Os- borne's hyper-enthusiasm for every page of Verdi, which, by the way, often makes him ap- pear overly intimidated by Toye. He rejects, for example, every negative comment of Toye's about certain admittedly infer- ior pages of Verdi out of hand. He is frequently self-contradic- tory. Concerning the final trio from Aroldo, for example. Os- borne says that "it is too short, and does not avoid sounding perfunctory. But what there is of it can hardly be faulted." (pg. 233). He does not avoid the Exploring the operas of Verdi Earth Day and You Florentine operatic ideals than to the prevailing German ro- mantic tendencies of his time: romanticized nature, exempli- fied in the works of Weber and Lortzing, or the mythological symbolism of Wagner. With this he coupled the simple, direct, and homophonic-almost Schu- bertian-ideal of song. He was, therefore, continually attracted to the kind of melodramatic and complicated plots that he was later to be criticized for. But it was these very literary sources which Verdi and his librettists could adapt to provide the emotional confrontations that always inspired Verdi to his 'finest music. All of this Osborne makes abundantly clear, in the gener- ously quoted correspondence be- tween Verdi and .his librettists and the emphasis which he places on the degree to which Verdi did, in fact, control them. It is amusing and instructive to read of Verdi leading Piave and Cammarano around by the nose until they would supply pressing the art sections which were old hat to him. The chap- ter on science fiction is a case in point. It is a frivolous di- gression from the visual arts in- to literary history, fascinating but unnecessary to the remarks on science and art in the suc- ceeding chapter. Similarly, sev- eral less well-known artists seem to be disproportionately expand- ed in the heat of recent discov- ery. (Morlotti receives f o u r whole pages, and the Czech Cub- ists, get a rather beside-the- point half page.) The diversity of styles in the twentieth century is, for t h e author, a manifestation of the Mannerism often found in socie- ties in transition; art respond- ing to all aspects of the fluid environment around it. In rang- ing through the major and minor styles on the art scene of the past seventy years, Coutts- Smith dips into influencing ideas from the various sciences, social sciences and liberal arts. A large and important chunk of the book traces the influence of Phenomenology through Exist- entialism to many contemporary arts forms and ideas. The difference between Es- sentialists and Existenialists is possibly the only thread which runs through the whole volume. On it Coutts-S'mith hangs the twentieth century variations of what was once called the Classi- cal-Romanticism divide. T hi s makes sense, because Dada, Ab- stract Expressionism, Tachism, and post-Dada place an Existen- tial emphasis on the importance The air was clean once, the water good. We could walk the land and enjoy earth's smell. Now a disease infects our coun- try. Its smog kills trees in Yose- mite. Its pollution destroys our lakes, rivers, marshes. The sea is next. We are burying our- selves under 7 million scrapped cars, 30 million tons of waste paper, 48 billion discarded cans and 28 billion bottles and jars a year. And every day we pile up a million tons more of garbage. The air we breathe circles the earth 40 times a year. Americans spew into it 140 million tons of pollutants: 90 million from cars -we burn more gasoline than the rest of the world combined. Los Angeles' smog may cause mass deaths by 1975. There are 5,500 Americans born each day. There will be 100 million more of us by the year 2000. We flat- ten our hills, fill our bays, blitz our wilderness. The quality drains from our lives: Each of us in any large sea-coast city is rapidly becoming one-twenty- millionth or one-thirty-millionth of a swelling megalopolis. These are warnings. Maga- zines can inform-as LOOK has with its Everglades plea (Sep- tember 9,1969) and its first ecol- ogy issue (November 4, 1969). But after the warnings and talk end, there must come action. All Americans, young and old, left and right, are getting to- gether to talk about our wrecked earth. April 22 is Earth Day, a time of nationwide teach-ins on ecology. LOOK's second ecol- ogy issue (now on newsstands) features 26 pages on issues that will be discussed on Earth Day. It warns, but it also argues: "The Fight to Save America Starts Now." The issue starts with a. plea to save "The Dis- appearing Beauty of the Salt Marsh," a black-and-white pho- 1; trite: "To fight against II Tro- vatore is futile: it is as undis- putaboy there as the Colosseum, the Mona Lisa, and the book of, Genesis." (pg. 257). I wish Os- borne had concentrated more on showing, opera by opera, the de- velopment and maturing of Ver- di's musical style, the increasing complexity and freedom of his harmonic vocabulary, ire short, how Verdi managed, almost sin- glehandedly, to refine and ex- pand the dramatic aspect of nineteenth century Italian op- era, finally culminating in Otel- Jo. To be sure, Osborne is aware of this, but while enthusiasm is often infectious, it is not always convincing. In spite of these deficiencies, which mar to a large extent only the last section of each chapter, Osborne's book should prove to be a valuable listening companion and source book for Verdi's operas. It is certainly knowledgeable, entertaining, and well-written. tographic essay. From "Five Who Care," LOOK readers learn about how things are changing. Sen. Gaylord Nelson, co-spon- sor of Earth Day, writes about the need for legislation and a Constitutional amendment guar- anteeing our right to a clean and healthful environment. Dr. Rene Dubos, a noted biologist and a Pulitzer Prize winner, and Dr. Margaret Mead, the anthropol- ogist, write about our changing society and the ways to make Americans draw back from our consume-now, damn-the-en- vironment attitude. Rod Cam- eron, a lawyer with the Environ- mental Defense Fund, argues that if legislation and attitudes don't change soon, we should sue polluters and demonstrate in the streets. And Henry Ford II pledges virtually emission- free cars by 1975. Dr. Paul Ehrlich,"Ecology's Angry Lobby- ist," outlines the problems and pins the blame on population. Then LOOK urges its readers to join activist ecology groups, some on campus, some off. LOOK lists 49 of the most active ecology groups getting tough with polluters in their areas, and their telephone numbers. On the same page, LOOK un- veils its Ecology Flag-green and. white with a Greek theta warn- ing of the threat of death to earth. It's a symbol of what's happened to our environment in 200 years. And it's a pledge to help clean up America by 1976,' its bicentennial. The flag is of- fered (at 25 cents each) to LOOK readers as a sign of their com- mitment to a clean environment. The warning. The call to ac- tion. LOOK's commitment. We can no longer wring our hands over the wrecked earth. We must act. Now. The Editors of Look A l 4v NOW IN PAPERBACK: explosive political autobiography DI. $1.95 A DIAL PRESS PAPERBACK Distributed by DELL Scott I Towering teddy bears C i a e s Oldenburg, PROPO- SALS F O R MONUMENTS A N D BUILDINGS, 1965 - 69, B i g T a b l e Publishing Co., 1969, $12.95. By RICHARD D. TURNER Taken as a work of art in itself, rather than as an "art book," Claes Oldenburg s Proposals for Monuments and Buildings, 1965-69 is an intrigu- ing example of a use of the print medium which is as scul- ptural as it is literary. At first glance, the book appears to fall in line with your basic run of the mill art books. It contains an interview with the artist, a set 'of reproductions of his drawings, and a few photos of the artist at work, or in this case, on location. What makes this book unique is that* the work does not lose anything in translation to the printed page, and is, in several instances, en- hanced -in the process, since the works with which the book concerns i ts e 1 f are manipula- tions of the imagination.. None exist outside of the mind of their creator and that of his public. Oldenburg's proposals - such as a Good Humor. Bar as tall as the Pan Am building, a colossal gearshift to replace the Nelson Column in Trafalgar Square, a skyscraper in the shape of a wooden clothespin for Chicago In terms of the visual arts, reading this book is participa- tory experience in one of its most rewarding' forms and goes beyond merely appreciating Ol- denburg's accomplishment. In envisioning what an island-siz- ed pizza in New York harbor would look like, you actually re- enact the artist's creative ex- perience. The invitation to the reader is clear: use your imagi- nation not to fill in the details or capture the atmosphere, as you must do when looking at a photograph of a cathedral or temple, but as a creative act complete in itself. Oldenburg's drawings, which make up the bulk of the book, serve as guides for those of us who are- slower witted. They are of no help whatsoever to the person who might wish to com- pare his visualization with "what it really looks like", or for someone interested in seeing 'the monuments in detail. They indicate a possible scale and sug- 'gest location, and little more. The style is loose and quick. The economy of line and wash mat- ches the brevity of the written descriptions. Their sketchy qua- lity reflects the rapid workings of the conceptualizing mind. The lack of detail and improb- able perspectives only serve to remind us once again that the work exists in the mind, not on the page. The drawings, graphi- cally exciting though they may be, are the by-products. perfectly. A collection of his works in book form does noth- ing to detract from their origi- nal qualities. Many of the draw- ings are reproduced half or one third size and thus do not suf- fer much in loss of scale. Proposals for Monuments and Buildings, 1965-69 goes beyond documentation of the artist's re- searches into a truly challeng- ing experience. Oldenburg's ero- tic humor, social critiques, and aesthetic subtleties are all ac- cessable - full strength - in this fine book. The story the. newspapers don't tell in "one of the most important books.. .yet written about Vietnam." -Publishers' Weekly si'.0 In DO IT!, Jerry R g written the most importantI statement made by a white revolutic ubin has political onarv in America today. It is The Communist Manifesto of our era and as a handbook for American revolutionaries must be compared to Che Guevara's Guerrilla Warfare. DO IT! is a Declaration of War between the generations --calling on kids to raise a new society upon the ashes of the old. c ,-i 1 Saigon, U.S.A. I * ' * * * * * ' * by Alfred Hassler Introduction by Senator George McGovern "A telling indictment of Presi- dent Thieu's r6gime." DO IT! is a prose poem singing the inside saga of the move- ment; it is a frenzied emo- tional symphony for a new social disorder; a comic book for seven-year-olds; a tribute to insanity. Eldridge Cleaver has written an introduction to it and .1