Wt'ednesday, July.] 9, 1972 THE MICHIGAN DAIL r Page Five Fuure Of Museums Alma S. Wittlin, MUSEUMS: IN SEARCH OF A USABLE FUTURE, The MIT Press, $15.00. By ARTHUR BLUMENTHAL Dr. Wittlin, trained at the University of Vienna and the State Museums of Berlin, begins her book with a definition of a museum, which she pursues further in the appendix. She uses the oft-repeated definition of a museum as a depository, research center and educational 'agency. The main assets of a museum involve the appeal of the objects to the eye and to the sense of touch and their ability to present unique his- torical, archeological or artistic insights. To the author, mu- seums "are means in the service of man and of his cultural evo- lution." Most of the rest of the book is then devoted to the history of collecting and of museums from the Greeks to the present day. The reasons for collecting varied throughout history. The early Greeks, Romans and other civilizations (even into six- teenth - century Europe) hoard- ed precious metals and jewels. Certain kings and American capitalists collected art or other rarities for their prestige value. To pagans and to many during the Middle Ages, collecting cer- tain natural objects had a magical benefit. Royal or na- tional collections were often be- gun because'of the need to show a people's ancestry - often to show their origin in some gold- en-age past, or, with America, to show future generations what went on at the country's be- ginning. Scientists and other intellectuals collected objects- artistic, historical or natural - in order to study and learn from them: Dr. Wittlin points out that art was most often collected to sublimate certain unfulfilled de- sires - "to encourage sensuous thoughts" and to "seek substi- tutes for inability to" draw, paint or sculpt. The collected works were most often displayed in a "storeroom-style" or "mon- ologue" presentation, with ob- jects lined up in semi-rational crowded fashion which was meant to be enjoyed by the owner and a few friends. Dr. Wittlin takes us on a fascinat- ing tour through the treasure chambers of the Hapsburg prin- ces, Napoleon's court, the Me- dici gallery, Cardinal Mazarin's gallery and many other early private museums and collec- tions. The author devotes over half the book to the history of pub- lic museums in Europe and America from the early eigh- teenth century on. She then outlines the "reforms" made in museums from 1850 to 1914 (in specialization, in national-his- toric, ethnological, and natural history museums, in interna- tional expositions, in American art museums, in museum edu- cation and architecture), from 1919 to 1939 (in Soviet Russia, in Italy and Germany, in the United States and in "liberal" Europe), and from 1945 to 1969 (in Western Europe- museum locations, architecture, attitudes, topics and centralization, in Eastern Europe, in America). The great institutions, such as the Smithsonian, the Victoria and Albert Museum, and the Metropolitan Museum, are dis- cussed in some detail as are emerging philosophies on pre- sentation, display and acquisi- tion in museums. Each of the -three "reform" periods is concluded with a cri- James Smithson, 'founding father' of Smithsonan Institution booksbooks tique of the "progress" made in availing the museum objects to the visitor. Some of Dr. Witt- lin's suggestions here include: "Museums might be built in such places of daily confluence . . . as . ,. shopping centers"; with the international trend .. - toward popular education goes the idea of a Cultural Center embracing a museum, library, theater and concert hall"; "mu- seum buildings ought . . . to fit the human scale and intone a mood of relaxation and enjoy- ment rather than of awe"; "the growing recognition of the po- tentialties and limitations of the Museum Exhibit, Amsterdam, 1735 'Zen and Japanese Culture' Daiseiz T. Suzuki, ZEN AND JAPANESE CULTURE, Prince- ton University Press, $3.95 (pa- perback) By KATHERYN VILLANUEVA To a western audience D. T. Suzuki perhaps held the most valuable talents, allowing him to explain successfully Oriental concepts. Trained both as a translator and teacher of En- glish and as a Buddhist disci- ple, he succeeded in fitting the most ineffable material into a comprehensible framework. For this ond other reasons, Suzuki's Zen and Japanese Culture, a re- print of the Bollingen hardcover edition, is very welcome in an inexpensive paper cover format. The text and generous, well- printed illustrations are consist- ent with the 1959 version. Rather unexpectedly, Suzuki. does not lead directly into a dis- cussion of Zen and the Arts, but first briefly explains what Zen Buddhism is. This he does by ' quickly tracing the Indian ap- proach (". , . philosophically minded . . .") to the Chinese Ch'an interpretation (".. , never lost touch with the plurality of things . . . never neglecting the practical side . . ."), and thus sets the stage for the all-en- compassing Japanese involve- ment. Subsequently, he treats "Japanese Art Culture" and convincingly interprets ancient and basic Japanese cultural traits, paralleling these tenden- cies with the basics of Zen ex- pression in the arts. Suzuki thus feels that the atmosphere with- in already established Japanese patterns was ripe for the intro- duction and complete assimila- ton of Zen thought Zen is seen as especially suited for amplifi- cation in the "molding" of Japanese culture and character, and is examined "particularly in the development of Bushido, the way of the warrior, in the study and propagation of'Con- fucianism and general educa- tion, in the rise of the art of tea, and in the composition and form of poetry known as hai- ku . . ." Suzuki also considers Today's writers ..-. Arthur Blumenthal is a cur- ator at the Elvehjem Art Museum. Katheryn Villanueva teaches Oriental Art History at the University of Wisconsin. the Japanese love of Nature, an- other basic attention of the in- cient Japanese which is later embellished by Zen, and evi- denced in all the arts. To further expand the read- er's understanding of the great intermingling of Zen thought in the life of the Japanese, Suzuki includes in a set of/ Appendices translated "cases" from the his- tory of Zen,. a Sutra, parts of a No play, sections of an ancient books on swordsmanship, and excerpts from the writings of the Chinese philosopher Chu- ang-tzu. Sixty-nine fine illustra- tions of Japanese and Chinese paintings and calligraphy have been integrated with the text. Of great help also are the full bibliography and dual language index. Suzuki's approach to his study is not one which intends to at- tribute everything of the char- acter and general culture of the Japanese to the development of Zen. He starts, rather, from a basic relief that expression in the arts of the country was and is based on an intensely spirit- ualized concept of men and his endeavors. Zen, thus, " helped the Japanese to come in touch with the presence of the mysteriously creative impulse in all branches of art . . ." As he defines the transcendent direc- tion of realizing one's own en- lightenment (satori) inherent in Zen, he finds, by extension, a powerful stimulent to the artis- tic impulses which produce swordsmanship, haiku, and the tea ceremony. Precisely on this point the crux of his argument is set. His interpretation of art in Japan is one which binds the creative to the intuitive in a total environmental involve- ment of man and the area around him. The tea house and the implements used in the tea ceremony offers a perfect ex- ample. It is the creation of this special environment which forms a total art; nothing should be separated from its full embient. Suzuki includes .a discussion of . training in "life" by many Zenmen in his section on Samurai. Each section of the book is richly illustrated with quota- tions from treatises by great Japanese artists in various me- dia. For example, the great bulk of the volume deals with the samurai swordsman. 'One may read, parallel with Suzuki's. in- terpretations, the words of the great fencing masters and their pupils. As he introduces the Zen idea of "the mind that is no-mind," Suzuki quotes from Yagyu Tajima no kami's trea- tise on the "Mystical Sword." The illustration serves to ex- plain the transcendence of the master swordsman beyond the thoughts of life and death, tech- nique and knowledge. By thus amplifying the number of pri- mary sources quoted, Suzuki al- lows for a historic and concept- ual understanding of both Zen and the specific art under dis- cussion. This approach should prove to be of great help to the student, since the elusive qual- ity of Oriental philosophy can be difficult to apply directly. The book is, to sum up; a, rich discussion which adds greatly to the literature in En- glish on Zen and its relation to Japanese culture.: It. certainly holds much of interest and val- ue for a general reading audi- ence. Suzuki's special ability to compile, express, and interpret difficult and basic philosophic ideas of Japan is nowhere more useful for a Western audience than in this book. This long ad- mired and aesthetically pleas- ing volume should reach many new readers in its paperback edition. human creature has initiated a search for multisensory ap- proaches to the museum visitor." In other words, museums should be easier places to visit and enjoy. The author spends the most time on the third "reform" period (1945-69) in the United States, where "a new museum was founded every 3.3 days be- tween 1960 and 1963." After quoting numerous such figures, she discerns the following trends in American museums: a changing taste in art museums, a concern with ecology in na- tural history and anthropology museums, the awareness of mi- nority groups, the displaying of "a Total Environment," the emphasis on research and "a widely spread malaise with re- gard to existing conditions in the presence of physical pro- gress." In the final section, which Dr. Wittlin entitles "A Twelve- Point Program for Museum Re- newal," she suggests several remedies for this malaise in American museums. Through- out the book and here again, she refers to the "ideological background," the "probing" needed to work out fundament- als and priorities. Following the International Council of Mu- seums, the author defines "a museum as an establishment in which objects are the main ideas of communication . . The term 'museum' is neither better nor worse than 'club' or 'center."' It should not be for- gotten that museums were meant to serve mankind, and thus should maintain "their va- lidity in terms of their capacity to enhance the overall poten- tialities of individuals and of society in years to come." Considering the o p e n i n g quotes in the book about "up- setting conventions" and "en- couraging dissent" in museums, Dr: Wittlin's remedies are warmed - over thoughts, high- ly idealistic, yet not particular- ly venturesome or original. Over and over again, she raises pertinent and sometimes stimu- lating questions which she rare- ly even attempts to answer. It is to be regretted that the au- thor fails to come to grips with the stated aims of the book to find a "usable future" for mu- seums, or at least make sugges- tions beyond the few pale and less-than-original "programs" she puts forth.