Coastal Traveler - Summer 2008 - (Page 46) historical precision, a sense of temporal distances (which the East Coast can permit, while the West Coast, as we shall see, is unable as yet to achieve it), and with considerable didactic flair. Now there can be no doubt that one of the most effective and least boring of didactic mechanisms is the diorama, the reduced-scale reproduction, the model, the crèche. And the museum is full of little crèches in glass cases, where the visiting children – and they are numerous – say, “Look, there’s Wall Street,” as an Italian child would say, “Look, there’s Bethlehem and the ox and the ass.” But, primarily, the diorama aims to establish itself as a substitute for reality, as something even more real. When it is flanked by a document (a parchment or an engraving), the little model is undoubtedly more real even than the engraving. Where there is no engraving, there is beside the diorama a color photograph of the diorama that looks like a painting of the period, except that (naturally) the diorama is more effective, more vivid that the painting. In some cases, the period painting exists. At a certain point a card tells us that a seventeenth-century portrait of Peter Stuyvesant exists, and here a European museum with didactic aims would display a good color reproduction; but the New York museum show us a three dimensional statue, which reproduces Peter Stuyvesant as portrayed in the painting, except that in the painting, of course, Peter is see only full-face or in half-profile, whereas here he is complete, buttocks included. But the museum goes further (and it isn’t the only one in the world that does this; the best ethnological museums observe the same criterion): It reconstructs interiors full-scale, like the Johnson Oval Office. Except that in other museums (for example, the splendid anthropological museum in Mexico City) the sometimes impressive reconstruction of an Aztec square (with merchants, warriors, and priests) is presented as such; the archeological finds are displayed separately and when the ancient object is represented by a perfect replica the visitor is clearly warned that he is seeing a reproduction. Now the Museum of the City of New York does not lack archeological precision, and it distinguishes genuine pieces from reconstructed pieces; but the distinction is indicated on explanatory panels beside the cases, while in the reconstruction, on the other hand, the original object and the wax figurine mingle in a continuum that the visitor is not invited to decipher. This occurs partly because, making a pedagogical decision we can hardly criticize, the designers want the visitor to feel an atmosphere and to plunge into the past without becoming a philologist or archeologist, and also because the reconstructed datum was already tainted by this original sin of “the leveling of pasts,” the fusion of copy and original. In this respect, the great exhibit that reproduces completely the 1906 drawing room of Mr. and Mrs. Harkness Flagler is exemplary. It is immediately worth noting that a private home seventy years old is already archeology; and this tells us a lot about the ravenous consumption of the present and about the constant “past-izing” process carried out by American civilization in its alternate process of futuristic planning and nostalgic remorse. And it is significant that in the big record shops the section called “Nostalgia,” along with racks devoted to the ‘40’s and the ‘50’s, has others for the ‘60’s and ‘70’s. But what was the original Flagler home like? As the didactic panel explains, the living room was inspired by the Sala dello Zodiaco in the Ducal Palace of Mantua. The ceiling was copied from a Venetian ecclesiastical building’s dome now preserved in Accademia in Venice. The wall panels are in Pompeiian-pre-Raphaelite style, and the fresco over the fireplace recalls Puvis de Chavannes. Now that real fake, the 1906 home, is maniacally faked in the museum showcase, but in such a way that it is difficult to say which objects were originally part of the room and which are fakes make to serve as connective tissue in the room (and even if we knew the difference, that knowledge would change nothing, because the reproductions of the reproductions are perfect and only a thief in the pay of an antique dealer would worry about the difficulty of telling them apart). The furniture is unquestionably that of the real living room – and there was real furniture in it, of real antiquity, one presumes – but there is no telling what the ceiling is; and while the dummies of the lady of the house, her maid, and a little girl speaking with a visiting friend are obviously false, the clothes the dummies wear are obviously real, that is, dating from 1906. What is there to complain about? The mortuary chill that seems to enfold the scene? The illusion of absolute reality that it conveys to the more naïve visitor? The “crècheification” of the bourgeois universe? The two-level reading the museum prompts with antiquarian information for those who choose to decipher the panels and the flattening of real against fake and the old on the modern for the more nonchalant? The kitsch reverence that overwhelms the visitor, thrilled by his encounter with a magic past? Or the fact that, coming from the slums or from public housing projects and from schools that lack our historical dimensions, he grasps, at least to a certain extent, the idea of the past? Because I have seen groups of black schoolchildren circulating here, excited and entertained, taking much more interest than a group of European white children being trundled through the Louvre… At the exit, along with postcards and illustrated history books, they sell reproductions of historical documents, from the bill of sale of Manhattan to the Declaration of Independence. These are described as “looking and feeling old,” because in addition to the tactile illusion, the facsimile is also scented with old spice. Almost real. Unfortunately the Manhattan purchase contract, penned in pseudo-antique characters, is in English, whereas the original was in Dutch. And so it isn’t a facsimile, but – excuse the neologism – a fac-different. As in some story by Heinlein or Asimov, you have the impression of entering and leaving time in a spatial-temporal haze where the centuries are confused. The same thing will happen to us in one of the wax museums of the California coast where we will see, in a café in the seaside style of England’s Brighton, Mozart and Caruso at the same table, with Hemingway standing behind them, while Shakespeare, at the next table, is conversing with Beethoven, coffee cup in hand. And for that matter, at Old Bethpage Village, on Long Island, they try to reconstruct an early nineteenth–century farm as it was; but “as it was” means with living animals just like those of the past, while it so happens that sheep, since those days, have undergone — thanks to clever breeding — an interesting evolution. In the past they had black noses with no wool on them; now their noses are white and covered with wool, so obviously the animals are worth more. And the eco-archeologists we’re talking about are working to rebreed the line to achieve an “evolutionary retrogression.” But the National Breeders’ Association is protesting, loudly and firmly, against this insult to zoological and technical progress. A cause is in the making: the advocates of “ever forward” against those of “backward march.” And there is no telling now which are the more futurological, and who are the real falsifiers of nature. But as far as battles for “the real thing” are concerned, our journey certainly doesn’t end here. More to come! 46 coastaltraveler summer
Table of Contents Feed for the Digital Edition of Coastal Traveler - Summer 2008 Coastal Traveler - Summer 2008 Contents Coastal Connoisseur Coastal Picks Coastal Art Coastal Flyer Coastal Sex Coastal Eco Coastal Surfer Coastal Adventurer Coastal Snaps San Diego La Jolla Laguna Beach Malibu Santa Barbara San Luis Obispo Big Sur Carmel Monterey Santa Cruz San Francisco Sausalito Mill Valley Stinson Beach Bolinas Olema Point Reyes Station Fairfax Inverness Marshall, Tomales Sebastopol Petaluma Sonoma Coast Redwood Coast Coastal Traveler - Summer 2008 Coastal Traveler - Summer 2008 - Coastal Traveler - Summer 2008 (Page 1) Coastal Traveler - Summer 2008 - Coastal Traveler - Summer 2008 (Page 2) Coastal Traveler - Summer 2008 - Coastal Traveler - Summer 2008 (Page 3) Coastal Traveler - Summer 2008 - Contents (Page 4) Coastal Traveler - Summer 2008 - Contents (Page 5) Coastal Traveler - Summer 2008 - Contents (Page 6) Coastal Traveler - Summer 2008 - Contents (Page 7) Coastal Traveler - Summer 2008 - Contents (Page 8) Coastal Traveler - Summer 2008 - Contents (Page 9) Coastal Traveler - Summer 2008 - Coastal Connoisseur (Page 10) Coastal Traveler - Summer 2008 - Coastal Connoisseur (Page 11) Coastal Traveler - Summer 2008 - Coastal Connoisseur (Page 12) Coastal Traveler - Summer 2008 - Coastal Picks (Page 13) Coastal Traveler - Summer 2008 - Coastal Picks (Page 14) Coastal Traveler - Summer 2008 - Coastal Picks (Page 15) Coastal Traveler - Summer 2008 - Coastal Picks (Page 16) Coastal Traveler - Summer 2008 - Coastal Picks (Page 17) Coastal Traveler - Summer 2008 - Coastal Picks (Page 18) Coastal Traveler - Summer 2008 - Coastal Picks (Page 19) Coastal Traveler - Summer 2008 - Coastal Picks (Page 20) Coastal Traveler - Summer 2008 - Coastal Picks (Page 21) Coastal Traveler - Summer 2008 - Coastal Picks (Page 22) Coastal Traveler - Summer 2008 - Coastal Picks (Page 23) Coastal Traveler - Summer 2008 - Coastal Art (Page 24) Coastal Traveler - Summer 2008 - Coastal Art (Page 25) Coastal Traveler - Summer 2008 - Coastal Art (Page 26) Coastal Traveler - Summer 2008 - Coastal Art (Page 27) Coastal Traveler - Summer 2008 - Coastal Flyer (Page 28) Coastal Traveler - Summer 2008 - Coastal Flyer (Page 29) Coastal Traveler - Summer 2008 - Coastal Flyer (Page 30) Coastal Traveler - Summer 2008 - Coastal Flyer (Page 31) Coastal Traveler - Summer 2008 - Coastal Flyer (Page 32) Coastal Traveler - Summer 2008 - Coastal Flyer (Page 33) Coastal Traveler - Summer 2008 - Coastal Flyer (Page 34) Coastal Traveler - Summer 2008 - Coastal Flyer (Page 35) Coastal Traveler - Summer 2008 - Coastal Sex (Page 36) Coastal Traveler - Summer 2008 - Coastal Sex (Page 37) Coastal Traveler - Summer 2008 - Coastal Sex (Page 38) Coastal Traveler - Summer 2008 - Coastal Sex (Page 39) Coastal Traveler - Summer 2008 - Coastal Sex (Page 40) Coastal Traveler - Summer 2008 - Coastal Sex (Page 41) Coastal Traveler - Summer 2008 - Coastal Eco (Page 42) Coastal Traveler - Summer 2008 - Coastal Eco (Page 43) Coastal Traveler - Summer 2008 - Coastal Eco (Page 44) Coastal Traveler - Summer 2008 - Coastal Eco (Page 45) Coastal Traveler - Summer 2008 - Coastal Eco (Page 46) Coastal Traveler - Summer 2008 - Coastal Eco (Page 47) Coastal Traveler - Summer 2008 - Coastal Eco (Page 48) Coastal Traveler - Summer 2008 - Coastal Eco (Page 49) Coastal Traveler - Summer 2008 - Coastal Surfer (Page 50) Coastal Traveler - Summer 2008 - Coastal Surfer (Page 51) Coastal Traveler - Summer 2008 - Coastal Adventurer (Page 52) Coastal Traveler - Summer 2008 - Coastal Adventurer (Page 53) Coastal Traveler - Summer 2008 - Coastal Adventurer (Page 54) Coastal Traveler - Summer 2008 - Coastal Adventurer (Page 55) Coastal Traveler - Summer 2008 - Coastal Adventurer (Page 56) Coastal Traveler - Summer 2008 - Coastal Adventurer (Page 57) Coastal Traveler - Summer 2008 - Coastal Snaps (Page 58) Coastal Traveler - Summer 2008 - Coastal Snaps (Page 59) Coastal Traveler - Summer 2008 - Coastal Snaps (Page 60) Coastal Traveler - Summer 2008 - Coastal Snaps (Page 61) Coastal Traveler - Summer 2008 - Coastal Snaps (Page 62) Coastal Traveler - Summer 2008 - Coastal Snaps (Page 63) Coastal Traveler - Summer 2008 - Coastal Snaps (Page 64) Coastal Traveler - Summer 2008 - Coastal Snaps (Page 65) Coastal Traveler - Summer 2008 - San Diego (Page 66) Coastal Traveler - Summer 2008 - La Jolla (Page 67) Coastal Traveler - Summer 2008 - Laguna Beach (Page 68) Coastal Traveler - Summer 2008 - Malibu (Page 69) Coastal Traveler - Summer 2008 - Santa Barbara (Page 70) Coastal Traveler - Summer 2008 - Santa Barbara (Page 71) Coastal Traveler - Summer 2008 - San Luis Obispo (Page 72) Coastal Traveler - Summer 2008 - Big Sur (Page 73) Coastal Traveler - Summer 2008 - Carmel (Page 74) Coastal Traveler - Summer 2008 - Monterey (Page 75) Coastal Traveler - Summer 2008 - Santa Cruz (Page 76) Coastal Traveler - Summer 2008 - San Francisco (Page 77) Coastal Traveler - Summer 2008 - Sausalito (Page 78) Coastal Traveler - Summer 2008 - Mill Valley (Page 79) Coastal Traveler - Summer 2008 - Mill Valley (Page 80) Coastal Traveler - Summer 2008 - Stinson Beach (Page 81) Coastal Traveler - Summer 2008 - Bolinas (Page 82) Coastal Traveler - Summer 2008 - Olema (Page 83) Coastal Traveler - Summer 2008 - Point Reyes Station (Page 84) Coastal Traveler - Summer 2008 - Point Reyes Station (Page 85) Coastal Traveler - Summer 2008 - Fairfax (Page 86) Coastal Traveler - Summer 2008 - Fairfax (Page 87) Coastal Traveler - Summer 2008 - Inverness (Page 88) Coastal Traveler - Summer 2008 - Inverness (Page 89) Coastal Traveler - Summer 2008 - Marshall, Tomales (Page 90) Coastal Traveler - Summer 2008 - Sebastopol (Page 91) Coastal Traveler - Summer 2008 - Petaluma (Page 92) Coastal Traveler - Summer 2008 - Sonoma Coast (Page 93) Coastal Traveler - Summer 2008 - Redwood Coast (Page 94) Coastal Traveler - Summer 2008 - Redwood Coast (Page 95) Coastal Traveler - Summer 2008 - Redwood Coast (Page 96)
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