Louisiana Cultural Vistas - Winter 2008 - (Page 3) EDITOR-IN-CHIEF Michael Sartisky, Ph.D. In the Eye of the Beholder: the Authenticity of Place At its best, art is one of the highest and most complex forms of human expression, a soaring manifestation of spirit and intellect. One of art’s purest forms, music, appeals directly to a single sense, and in so doing also stimulates links to other human intellectual endeavors such as higher mathematics, astronomy and physics, and even yields metaphors such as the harmony of the spheres. One of art’s myriad dimensions is to instill beauty in our lives; for example, to invest human-made space or architecture with grace and inspiration such as that achieved in the resounding vaults of great cathedrals, or the harmonious spans of bridges, or even in the classic symmetries of center-hall cottages or even more vernacular buildings. Art’s intrinsic connection to grace and structure has led fine architecture — at least in earlier eras less wedded to demonstrating how fragmented and brutal reality can be — to be described as “frozen music.” The visual arts, too, enrich our lives, whether in the humble cast of a turned vase or cup, a wooden spindle or woven cloth, or in its more elaborated forms, in paintings and sculpture that help redefine and reshape how we see. Through art we understand that objects are really forms, forms are really masses of color and color really light, and that perspective and especially symbol can be weighted or manipulated. As such, art can define and reinforce, or in our more challenging modern, post-Einsteinian and Heidelbergian sense of a less harmonious and consistent universe, challenge and even assault our sense of order and the harmony of creation. Clarion Caveat Our present post-Katrina moment in Louisiana, and especially in New Orleans, offers an opportunity to revisit anew how we want art to be manifested in our lives. We are poised to consider the architecture of a rebuilt city and how we want to define the place we inhabit, of what kind of music ought to evolve as our aesthetic and even our ethnic identity evolves, even the visual dimension and media by which we express ourselves. A city so historically rooted as New Orleans has only harmed itself in a quest for modernity. Just look at the anonymous commercial structures of the Central Business District and the plethora of California bungalows and suburban split levels of Lakeview or the East. Succumbing to a nationalizing tendency towards postmodernism is not likely to serve us any better, rather, it only submerges us further in anonymity. A postmodernist sensibility embraces the notion of meaning as being elusive, structure being mutable, narcissistic expression as substituting for epic and common values; contemporary art too often mistakes challenging complacency with thinking it has a better alternative to offer. New Orleans’ historicity is already a better alternative as even the so-called New Urbanists are discovering. We are not the first to encounter these contradictions and struggle with their implications. One of the great masters of many arts, Pablo Picasso, late in his career, encapsulated many of the same conflicts: “In art the mass of people no longer seeks consolation and exaltation, but those who are refined, rich, unoccupied, who are distillers of quintessences, seek what is new, strange, original, extravagant, scandalous. I myself, since Cubism and before, have satisfied these masters and critics with all the changing oddities which passed through my head, and the less they understood me, the more they admired me. By amusing myself with all these games, with all these absurdities, puzzles, rebuses, arabesques, I became famous and that very quickly. And fame for a painter means sales, gains, fortune, riches. And today, as you know, I am celebrated, I am rich. But when I am alone with myself, I have not the courage to think of myself as an artist in the great and ancient sense of the term. Giotto, Titian, Rembrandt were great painters. I am only a public entertainer who has understood his times and exploited as best he could the imbecility, the vanity, the cupidity of his contemporaries. Mine is a bitter confession, more painful than it may appear, but it has the merit being sincere.” So, as Picasso poses the question, do we, too, succumb to being a public entertainer, to merely pandering to the moment, to meeting the contemporary appetite for imbecility, vanity and cupidity and without knowing ourselves, without asserting our own authentic true identity as it has evolved here unique within the United States? Am I alone in being tired of being sneered at for not wanting New Orleans to look like Los Angeles, or Chicago, or New York, let alone Atlanta or Charlotte? What we need is a manifesto of New Orleans’ own cultural identity, not frozen in time and antiquarian, but dynamically linked to our own past and rich with our own and not some other city’s traditions or the current aesthetic of schools of architecture. —Michael Sartisky, Ph.D. Editor-In-Chief EXECUTIVE EDITOR/ART DIRECTOR David Johnson MANAGING EDITOR John Kemp LAYOUT/DESIGNER Toan Nguyen ASSISTANT DESIGNER Laura Ladendorf COPY EDITOR Anita Yesho CONTRIBUTORS Jason Berry; Jay D. Edwards, Ph.D.; Rachel Gibbons; Erin Greenwald; Jessica Harris, Ph.D.; LeeAnna Keith, Ph.D.; Karen Kingsley, Ph.D.; John H. Lawrence; C. W. Link; Kevin McCaffrey; Keely Merritt; Bruce Raeburn, Ph.D.; Ben Sandmel; Michael P. Smith; Sue Strachan; Thomas Uskali LEH BOARD OF DIRECTORS M. Cleland Powell III New Orleans, Chair Kevin M. Kelly Burnside, Vice Chair Janet R. Wood Lafayette, Treasurer R. Lewis McHenry, J.D. New Orleans, Secretary Brad Adams, J.D. New Orleans Judy M. Bajoie New Orleans Prof. John Biguenet New Orleans James Carter, J.D. New Orleans V. Thomas Clark Jr., J.D. Baton Rouge Philip C. Earhart Lake Charles Glenda Erwin Shreveport Rosemary Upshaw Ewing Quitman Kenneth Gladish, Ph.D. National Paul M. Haygood, J.D. New Orleans Mark H. Heller, C.L.U., C.P.C. New Orleans Sarah Kracke Baton Rouge Henry C. Lacey, Ph.D. New Orleans Robert Levy, J.D. Ruston Anil Nanda, M.D. Shreveport Alice G. Pecoraro, Ph.D. Morgan City Lawrence N. Powell, Ph.D. New Orleans Drew Ranier, J.D. Lake Charles Philip A. Rozeman, M.D. Shreveport Mary Ann Sternberg Baton Rouge Renee Vanover Berwick Michael Sartisky, Ph.D. President/Executive Director Winter 2008-09/LOUISIANA CULTURAL VISTAS 3
Table of Contents Feed for the Digital Edition of Louisiana Cultural Vistas - Winter 2008 Louisiana Cultural Vistas - Winter 2008 Contents Friends Editor's Column Louisiana Endowment for the Humanities Prospect.1 New Orleans The Historic New Orleans Collection The Enduring Performance of Michael P. Smith Jazz Notes Louisiana Foodways Birds of a Feather: Windfowl Carvings in Southeast Louisiana Louisiana Association of Museums Louisiana Architecture O. Winston Link in Louisiana The Ogden Museum of Southern Art The Colfax Massacre Louisiana State Museum Unlocking the History of Greek Key Architecture Bookstand Sound Advice Forum Louisiana Cultural Vistas - Winter 2008 Louisiana Cultural Vistas - Winter 2008 - Louisiana Cultural Vistas - Winter 2008 (Page Cover1) Louisiana Cultural Vistas - Winter 2008 - Louisiana Cultural Vistas - Winter 2008 (Page Cover2) Louisiana Cultural Vistas - Winter 2008 - Contents (Page 1) Louisiana Cultural Vistas - Winter 2008 - Friends (Page 2) Louisiana Cultural Vistas - Winter 2008 - Editor's Column (Page 3) Louisiana Cultural Vistas - Winter 2008 - Louisiana Endowment for the Humanities (Page 4) Louisiana Cultural Vistas - Winter 2008 - Louisiana Endowment for the Humanities (Page 5) Louisiana Cultural Vistas - Winter 2008 - Louisiana Endowment for the Humanities (Page 6) Louisiana Cultural Vistas - Winter 2008 - Louisiana Endowment for the Humanities (Page 7) Louisiana Cultural Vistas - Winter 2008 - Prospect.1 New Orleans (Page 8) Louisiana Cultural Vistas - Winter 2008 - Prospect.1 New Orleans (Page 9) Louisiana Cultural Vistas - Winter 2008 - Prospect.1 New Orleans (Page 10) Louisiana Cultural Vistas - Winter 2008 - Prospect.1 New Orleans (Page 11) Louisiana Cultural Vistas - Winter 2008 - Prospect.1 New Orleans (Page 12) Louisiana Cultural Vistas - Winter 2008 - Prospect.1 New Orleans (Page 13) Louisiana Cultural Vistas - Winter 2008 - Prospect.1 New Orleans (Page 14) Louisiana Cultural Vistas - Winter 2008 - Prospect.1 New Orleans (Page 15) Louisiana Cultural Vistas - Winter 2008 - Prospect.1 New Orleans (Page 16) Louisiana Cultural Vistas - Winter 2008 - Prospect.1 New Orleans (Page 17) Louisiana Cultural Vistas - Winter 2008 - The Historic New Orleans Collection (Page 18) Louisiana Cultural Vistas - Winter 2008 - The Historic New Orleans Collection (Page 19) Louisiana Cultural Vistas - Winter 2008 - The Historic New Orleans Collection (Page 20) Louisiana Cultural Vistas - Winter 2008 - The Historic New Orleans Collection (Page 21) Louisiana Cultural Vistas - Winter 2008 - The Enduring Performance of Michael P. Smith (Page 22) Louisiana Cultural Vistas - Winter 2008 - The Enduring Performance of Michael P. Smith (Page 23) Louisiana Cultural Vistas - Winter 2008 - The Enduring Performance of Michael P. Smith (Page 24) Louisiana Cultural Vistas - Winter 2008 - The Enduring Performance of Michael P. Smith (Page 25) Louisiana Cultural Vistas - Winter 2008 - The Enduring Performance of Michael P. Smith (Page 26) Louisiana Cultural Vistas - Winter 2008 - The Enduring Performance of Michael P. Smith (Page 27) Louisiana Cultural Vistas - Winter 2008 - The Enduring Performance of Michael P. Smith (Page 28) Louisiana Cultural Vistas - Winter 2008 - The Enduring Performance of Michael P. Smith (Page 29) Louisiana Cultural Vistas - Winter 2008 - The Enduring Performance of Michael P. Smith (Page 30) Louisiana Cultural Vistas - Winter 2008 - The Enduring Performance of Michael P. Smith (Page 31) Louisiana Cultural Vistas - Winter 2008 - The Enduring Performance of Michael P. Smith (Page 32) Louisiana Cultural Vistas - Winter 2008 - The Enduring Performance of Michael P. Smith (Page 33) Louisiana Cultural Vistas - Winter 2008 - Jazz Notes (Page 34) Louisiana Cultural Vistas - Winter 2008 - Jazz Notes (Page 35) Louisiana Cultural Vistas - Winter 2008 - Louisiana Foodways (Page 36) Louisiana Cultural Vistas - Winter 2008 - Louisiana Foodways (Page 37) Louisiana Cultural Vistas - Winter 2008 - Birds of a Feather: Windfowl Carvings in Southeast Louisiana (Page 38) Louisiana Cultural Vistas - Winter 2008 - Birds of a Feather: Windfowl Carvings in Southeast Louisiana (Page 39) Louisiana Cultural Vistas - Winter 2008 - Birds of a Feather: Windfowl Carvings in Southeast Louisiana (Page 40) Louisiana Cultural Vistas - Winter 2008 - Birds of a Feather: Windfowl Carvings in Southeast Louisiana (Page 41) Louisiana Cultural Vistas - Winter 2008 - Birds of a Feather: Windfowl Carvings in Southeast Louisiana (Page 42) Louisiana Cultural Vistas - Winter 2008 - Birds of a Feather: Windfowl Carvings in Southeast Louisiana (Page 43) Louisiana Cultural Vistas - Winter 2008 - Birds of a Feather: Windfowl Carvings in Southeast Louisiana (Page 44) Louisiana Cultural Vistas - Winter 2008 - Birds of a Feather: Windfowl Carvings in Southeast Louisiana (Page 45) Louisiana Cultural Vistas - Winter 2008 - Birds of a Feather: Windfowl Carvings in Southeast Louisiana (Page 46) Louisiana Cultural Vistas - Winter 2008 - Birds of a Feather: Windfowl Carvings in Southeast Louisiana (Page 47) Louisiana Cultural Vistas - Winter 2008 - Birds of a Feather: Windfowl Carvings in Southeast Louisiana (Page 48) Louisiana Cultural Vistas - Winter 2008 - Birds of a Feather: Windfowl Carvings in Southeast Louisiana (Page 49) Louisiana Cultural Vistas - Winter 2008 - Louisiana Association of Museums (Page 50) Louisiana Cultural Vistas - Winter 2008 - Louisiana Association of Museums (Page 51) Louisiana Cultural Vistas - Winter 2008 - Louisiana Architecture (Page 52) Louisiana Cultural Vistas - Winter 2008 - Louisiana Architecture (Page 53) Louisiana Cultural Vistas - Winter 2008 - O. Winston Link in Louisiana (Page 54) Louisiana Cultural Vistas - Winter 2008 - O. Winston Link in Louisiana (Page 55) Louisiana Cultural Vistas - Winter 2008 - O. Winston Link in Louisiana (Page 56) Louisiana Cultural Vistas - Winter 2008 - O. Winston Link in Louisiana (Page 57) Louisiana Cultural Vistas - Winter 2008 - O. Winston Link in Louisiana (Page 58) Louisiana Cultural Vistas - Winter 2008 - O. Winston Link in Louisiana (Page 59) Louisiana Cultural Vistas - Winter 2008 - O. Winston Link in Louisiana (Page 60) Louisiana Cultural Vistas - Winter 2008 - O. Winston Link in Louisiana (Page 61) Louisiana Cultural Vistas - Winter 2008 - O. Winston Link in Louisiana (Page 62) Louisiana Cultural Vistas - Winter 2008 - O. Winston Link in Louisiana (Page 63) Louisiana Cultural Vistas - Winter 2008 - The Ogden Museum of Southern Art (Page 64) Louisiana Cultural Vistas - Winter 2008 - The Ogden Museum of Southern Art (Page 65) Louisiana Cultural Vistas - Winter 2008 - The Ogden Museum of Southern Art (Page 66) Louisiana Cultural Vistas - Winter 2008 - The Ogden Museum of Southern Art (Page 67) Louisiana Cultural Vistas - Winter 2008 - The Colfax Massacre (Page 68) Louisiana Cultural Vistas - Winter 2008 - The Colfax Massacre (Page 69) Louisiana Cultural Vistas - Winter 2008 - The Colfax Massacre (Page 70) Louisiana Cultural Vistas - Winter 2008 - The Colfax Massacre (Page 71) Louisiana Cultural Vistas - Winter 2008 - The Colfax Massacre (Page 72) Louisiana Cultural Vistas - Winter 2008 - The Colfax Massacre (Page 73) Louisiana Cultural Vistas - Winter 2008 - The Colfax Massacre (Page 74) Louisiana Cultural Vistas - Winter 2008 - The Colfax Massacre (Page 75) Louisiana Cultural Vistas - Winter 2008 - The Colfax Massacre (Page 76) Louisiana Cultural Vistas - Winter 2008 - The Colfax Massacre (Page 77) Louisiana Cultural Vistas - Winter 2008 - The Colfax Massacre (Page 78) Louisiana Cultural Vistas - Winter 2008 - The Colfax Massacre (Page 79) Louisiana Cultural Vistas - Winter 2008 - Louisiana State Museum (Page 80) Louisiana Cultural Vistas - Winter 2008 - Louisiana State Museum (Page 81) Louisiana Cultural Vistas - Winter 2008 - Louisiana State Museum (Page 82) Louisiana Cultural Vistas - Winter 2008 - Louisiana State Museum (Page 83) Louisiana Cultural Vistas - Winter 2008 - Unlocking the History of Greek Key Architecture (Page 84) Louisiana Cultural Vistas - Winter 2008 - Unlocking the History of Greek Key Architecture (Page 85) Louisiana Cultural Vistas - Winter 2008 - Unlocking the History of Greek Key Architecture (Page 86) Louisiana Cultural Vistas - Winter 2008 - Unlocking the History of Greek Key Architecture (Page 87) Louisiana Cultural Vistas - Winter 2008 - Unlocking the History of Greek Key Architecture (Page 88) Louisiana Cultural Vistas - Winter 2008 - Unlocking the History of Greek Key Architecture (Page 89) Louisiana Cultural Vistas - Winter 2008 - Unlocking the History of Greek Key Architecture (Page 90) Louisiana Cultural Vistas - Winter 2008 - Unlocking the History of Greek Key Architecture (Page 91) Louisiana Cultural Vistas - Winter 2008 - Bookstand (Page 92) Louisiana Cultural Vistas - Winter 2008 - Bookstand (Page 93) Louisiana Cultural Vistas - Winter 2008 - Sound Advice (Page 94) Louisiana Cultural Vistas - Winter 2008 - Sound Advice (Page 95) Louisiana Cultural Vistas - Winter 2008 - Forum (Page 96) Louisiana Cultural Vistas - Winter 2008 - Forum (Page Cover3) Louisiana Cultural Vistas - Winter 2008 - Forum (Page Cover4)
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