Silent
Mysteries
The quiet, marvelous
paintings of Chardin capture things as they really are, making
him the genius of the 18th century bourgeois imagination
By ROBERT HUGHES
The show
of 99 works by the French
artist Jean-Siméon Chardin, at the Metropolitan Museum of
Art in New York City until Sept. 3, falls just 21 years after
the last Chardin retrospective in America-which took place
at the Cleveland Museum of Art and didn't reach Manhattan.
Does the new show add much to our knowledge of Chardin? In
a sense no, because not many fresh facts about him have surfaced
in the past two decades. But in the sense that really matters,
yes, and yes again. Any extended contact with Chardin is invigorating
and marvelous.
The show's otherwise excellent catalog frets a bit. Why,
it wonders, should there be another Chardin show so close
on the heels of the first? Well, the answer is that in human
life-if not in that of a museum or a reputation-20 years is
a long time. A generation of art lovers (maybe two) has come
into being since 1979. All those interested kids who don't
know Chardin, who have never seen him at full stretch! And,
it might have added, what about the rest of us, for whom 20
years is far too long between full exposures to this genius
of bourgeois imagination?
No question, Chardin was one of the greatest artists who
ever picked up a brush-and all the greater for painting without
the attributes of greatness. Eighteenth century France was
a fine incubator for pictorial grandeur, as in the history
pieces of Jean-Baptiste Greuze. Its sexual rhetoric-think
of Boucher's pink and frothy shepherdesses-was peerless. Since
the reign of Louis XIV, whose minister Jean-Baptiste Colbert
had striven to connect the visual arts to the essence of French
gloire, every kind of official discourse had flourished in
French painting and sculpture, as it did in the arts of Italy.
But unofficial life-the relatively ordinary pleasures and
utterances of the bourgeois center, the common protein of
French society-did not as yet have its painter laureate.
Chardin became that man. There was nothing extraordinary
about his career except the beauty of the works it produced.
His field of social vision was narrow. But by painting what
he knew, neither more nor less, he became the standard-bearer
of visual truth to a generation of French intellectuals, the
Encyclopedists, led by the philosopher Denis Diderot. To them,
Chardin's refusal of the highfalutin theme seemed exemplary.
He showed that a jar of apricots on a table could be just
as important and freighted with meaning as a battle scene
in an epic of Alexander, the impregnation of a nymph by Apollo,
or the reception into Heaven of a patron's patron saint. In
time, Chardin's "natural vision" would be eclipsed by a new
form of idealism, that of the neoclassicists, like David.
But never for long. People may admire David, but they love
Chardin. They cleave to his lack of pretension and see it
as something fundamental to the art of painting-which it is.
Chardin didn't say much-at least, not much that he did say
has been preserved, since he had no Boswell and the gossips
who adored his work, like the Goncourt brothers, came from
a later generation and never met him. But there is a tantalizing
remark attributed to him by a writer of the 1780s, Charles-Nicolas
Cochin: "I must forget everything I have seen and even forget
the way such objects have been treated by others." This hints
at the extreme pride and immense ambition that underwrote
Chardin's apparently modest arrangements of brown jugs, water
glasses, dead rabbits and fruit.
To paint things in a way that forgot how they'd been done
before-you couldn't do that with a nymph or an angel. Nymphs
and angels aren't real, and for that reason you needed to
know the precedents in order to do them. But you had to know
things even better to forget them, to forget their names,
their styles of presentation. And only by this means, this
un-naming, could the penetration of Nature-things as they
really are, the silent mysteries beyond nomenclature-really
begin. This was Chardin's enterprise, and in a certain sense-particularly
in the domain of inanimate objects rather than the expressive
human face-he can be said to be the first artist to take on
its full weight.
Painters had done still life before. The tradition goes back
to Greco-Roman antiquity. Still life cropped up in later painting
but usually as an adjunct, a prop. From there it turned into
a sort of allegorical fixture-the 17th century peach with
its brown spots and wormholes, for instance, warning of the
rottenness and transience at the heart of worldly pleasure.
But there is little allegorical content in Chardin's still
life, and when (rarely) it occurs, one senses a throwback.
What he is best at painting is things seen for their own sake,
deriving their meaning from their being, not the other way
around. The Ray, 1725-26, is perhaps his single most imitated
work in modern times. Cézanne, Matisse and Soutine all did
homage to it in copies. Anyone who has seen the verso, as
it were, of a dead ray, or skate, the commonest of sights
in a Paris fishmarket, knows that the underside of this fish
bears a grisly resemblance to the human face. But that sort
of double meaning, with its built-in pathos, would probably
have struck the artist as a bit cheap. Diderot, despite his
great admiration of Chardin, thought the ray disgusting-but
there's nothing to suggest that Chardin was repelled by those
glistening pearl-pink guts or the lunar luster on the ray's
skin, let alone that (like some modern writers) he saw in
the hanging ray an analogy to public execution or even the
Crucifixion.
All the same, it is a dramatic picture-almost a narrative,
thanks to the cat making its move on the oysters-and Chardin's
finest moments lay much more in the domain of stillness, where
nothing "happens" at all. We know practically nothing of Chardin's
character or emotional predilections, yet we can't help sensing
that no artist could have been better equipped to paint still
life. (Actually, he's not unlike the cat in his own seafood
paintings, fastidiously stalking, with bright-eyed attention,
something that cannot move but can go stale.) Everything comes
to matter under his level scrutiny. A pyramid of red strawberries
becomes a blazing Etna. The surface of a plum turns into a
small adventure in discrimination as he gives you the white
powder on the purply-black skin and the sharper white highlights
reflecting from its gloss, and challenges you to follow the
means by which he conveyed both.
He was a good painter of adults, pensive servants especially-who
never, it should be noted, become illustrations for a lecture
on class-but his children are marvels. A young boy, the son
of one of Chardin's collectors, soberly kitted out in black
tricorn hat and mole-colored coat, is attentively building
a house of cards-that emblem of fragility that nonetheless
does not fall. Another lad, not 10 years old, watches with
the most exquisitely rendered absorption the fate of a spinning
top on a writing table; it leans under the pull of gravity
but is still (only just) erect.
And then there's the girl with the shuttlecock, that magical
little refugee from a Piero della Francesca, all inwardness
as she contemplates the sneak serve she is about to make.
The visual rhymes here are delicious. Each feather of the
shuttlecock, for instance, repeats some element of her appearance.
White feathers repeat the white of her apron; a blue feather
picks up the blue of her ribbon; a pink feather, the color
of her cheek. It is as perfectly made as any sonnet. It makes
you realize what rewards can flow from Chardin's desire to
link the appearance of spontaneous feeling with the discreet
display of its opposite, a technical perfection whose integrity
rises from knowing its own limits. "All through his life,"
writes curator Pierre Rosenberg in the catalog, "Chardin battled
to overcome his lack of natural talent." He is still an irrefutable
proof that it isn't only virtuosos who change art history.
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August 14, 2000
| NO. 32
C
O V E R
COVER:
Tiger's Biggest Gamble
He is a wonder of the world, a spectacle of skill and smarts at the astonishing
age of 24. And in an exclusive interview, golf's brightest star tells
Time why he decided to change the swing that won the Masters-and how it
has paid off
PROFILE
OF A CHAMPION: Changing His Stripes
Woods wasn't at ease with celebrity, but he learned to cope
S
O U T H P A C I F I C
AUSTRALIA:
Olympic Police Take Their Marks
Officials promise a safe Games, with a little help from friends
NEW
ZEALAND: Soul Searching
Prime Minister Helen Clark talks about the state of the nation
B
U S I N E S S
FOOTBALL:
Golden Goals
Soccer clubs are spending crazy sums to buy top players
A
R T S
ART: Chardin's
genius for painting things as they are
THEATER:
Cameron Mackintosh's musical spellbinder
MUSIC:
King Benny Nawahi, wizard of the steel guitar
CINEMA:
With Chopper, crime does pay
In
Wonder Boys, Michael Douglas acts his age
ONLINE:
Websites that scout out good music
TRAVELER'S
ADVISORY
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