Ideal City

Ideal City

Saturday, November 30, 2013

Thanksgiving Portraits



As a child I spent every Thanksgiving with my family in Rhode Island.   My grandparents, aunts, uncles and cousins lived there and we would travel from Massachusetts to gather at my grandparent’s house.  As the family grew to fifteen grandchildren, we would go to the golf club for a fancy turkey dinner.  Every few years a family portrait would be taken.  Thanks to the magic of scanning, I have two of those photos – one from when I was about six, the other maybe eight years later.  They are wonderful records of our family, of popular fashions and hair-dos and of portrait conventions of the 1960s and 70s.


(Notice the color coordinated families?)




These photographs got me thinking about a famous family portrait by Diego Velasquez – a far more interesting and complex work


In 1656, Diego Velazquez, the court artist to King Philip IV of Spain painted what is considered to be one of his finest and certainly his most popular painting.  It’s called Las Meninas, which means the Maids of Honor, although it had a different title originally.  It is, in essence, a family portrait.  We see the King and Queen’s five year old daughter, the Infanta, and the various officials, courtiers and maids who attend to her needs, and, in the background, we see the King and Queen reflected in a mirror.  We also see the well dressed artist at the left, painting a large canvas.

Diego Velazquez, Las Meninas,  1656 , Prado Museum, Madrid, Spain
http://www.wga.hu/index1.html



































So, this is more than a portrait of the Infanta.  You might ask, why is she surrounded by all these people?  If she is the subject of the portrait, why are they present?  Are they that important?  And how can it be that the portrait painter, Velazquez, is featured here.  Who or what is he painting?  It can’t be the Infanta, can it?  And why are all those people looking at us?  Are we the subject of the painting?  If this is so, are we playing a role here?  Are we the King and Queen of Spain?   Our interpretation of the meaning of the painting is dependent upon whom we believe to be standing in front of it.  And we don’t have to choose just one explanation.  As we shift our viewpoints, we become aware of more possibilities of interpretation -- more questions and answers reveal themselves.  The philosopher Michael Foucault was fascinated by this aspect of the painting and described it eloquently in the introduction to his groundbreaking work, The Order of Things, in this precise but neutral place, the observer and the observed take part in a ceaseless exchange.” 

When Las Meninas was created, Renaissance conventions of painting had long been established that ensured that we, the viewer, looked into a painting, into another space – as though we are looking through a window into another world that is ours to contemplate, yet remains separate from our own.  And now, a century and a half later, Velasquez challenges those conventions.  These people he has painted are not confined to their own space.  They are acknowledging the fiction of the painting and looking out at us.   And Velazquez has done something even more complex than involve us, his audience.  Since we are able to engage with this art work, and can change its meaning depending upon our questions, and our answers, the painting is not complete, nor is it entirely successful, unless we acknowledge and play our part in it. 

We keep looking – we play our part.  The ceaseless exchange endures in faded family photographs and in great masterpieces like Velasquez’s.