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Chapter Ten
DISTINCTIVELY AMERICAN ARTS
Music, dance, architecture, visual
arts, and literature
Photograph © Chris Lee
The development of the arts in America --
music, dance, architecture, the visual arts, and literature
-- has been marked by a tension between two strong sources
of inspiration: European sophistication and domestic
originality. Frequently, the best American artists have
managed to harness both sources. This chapter touches upon a
number of major American figures in the arts, some of whom
have grappled with the Old World-New World conflict in their
work.
MUSIC
Until the 20th century, "serious" music in
America was shaped by European standards and idioms. A
notable exception was the music of composer Louis Moreau
Gottschalk (1829-1869), son of a British father and a Creole
mother. Gottschalk enlivened his music with plantation
melodies and Caribbean rhythms that he had heard in his
native New Orleans. He was the first American pianist to
achieve international recognition, but his early death
contributed to his relative obscurity.
More representative of early American music
were the compositions of Edward MacDowell (1860-1908), who
not only patterned his works after European models but
stoutly resisted the label of "American composer." He was
unable to see beyond the same notion that hampered many
early American writers: To be wholly American, he thought,
was to be provincial.
A distinctively American classical music
came to fruition when such composers as George Gershwin
(1898-1937) and Aaron Copland (1900-1990) incorporated
homegrown melodies and rhythms into forms borrowed from
Europe. Gershwin's "Rhapsody in Blue" and his opera Porgy
and Bess were influenced by jazz and African-American
folk songs. Some of his music is also self-consciously
urban: The opening of his "An American in Paris," for
example, mimics taxi horns.
As Harold C. Schonberg writes in The
Lives of the Great Composers, Copland "helped break the
stranglehold of the German domination on American music." He
studied in Paris, where he was encouraged to depart from
tradition and indulge his interest in jazz (for more on
jazz, see chapter 11). Besides writing symphonies,
concertos, and an opera, he composed the scores for several
films. He is best known, however, for his ballet scores,
which draw on American folk songs; among them are "Billy the
Kid," "Rodeo," and "Appalachian Spring."
Another American original was Charles Ives
(1874-1954), who combined elements of popular classical
music with harsh dissonance. "I found I could not go
on using the familiar chords early," he explained. "I
heard something else." His idiosyncratic music was
seldom performed while he was alive, but Ives is now
recognized as an innovator who anticipated later musical
developments of the 20th century. Composers who followed
Ives experimented with 12-tone scales, minimalism, and other
innovations that some concertgoers found alienating.
In the last decades of the 20th century,
there has been a trend back toward music that pleases both
composer and listener, a development that may be related to
the uneasy status of the symphony orchestra in America.
Unlike Europe, where it is common for governments to
underwrite their orchestras and opera companies, the arts in
America get relatively little public support. To survive,
symphony orchestras depend largely on philanthropy and paid
admissions.
Some orchestra directors have found a way to
keep mainstream audiences happy while introducing new music
to the public: Rather than segregate the new pieces, these
directors program them side-by-side with traditional fare.
Meanwhile, opera, old and new, has been flourishing. Because
it is so expensive to stage, however, opera depends heavily
on the generosity of corporate and private donors.
DANCE
Closely related to the development of
American music in the early 20th century was the emergence
of a new, and distinctively American, art form -- modern
dance. Among the early innovators was Isadora Duncan
(1878-1927), who stressed pure, unstructured movement in
lieu of the positions of classical ballet.
The main line of development, however, runs
from the dance company of Ruth St. Denis (1878-1968) and her
husband-partner, Ted Shawn (1891-1972). Her pupil Doris
Humphrey (1895-1958) looked outward for inspiration, to
society and human conflict. Another pupil of St. Denis,
Martha Graham (1893-1991), whose New York-based company
became perhaps the best known in modern dance, sought to
express an inward-based passion. Many of Graham's most
popular works were produced in collaboration with leading
American composers -- "Appalachian Spring" with Aaron
Copland, for example.
Later choreographers searched for new
methods of expression. Merce Cunningham (1919- ) introduced
improvisation and random movement into performances. Alvin
Ailey (1931-1989) incorporated African dance elements and
black music into his works. Recently such choreographers as
Mark Morris (1956- ) and Liz Lerman (1947-) have defied the
convention that dancers must be thin and young. Their
belief, put into action in their hiring practices and
performances, is that graceful, exciting movement is not
restricted by age or body type.
In the early 20th century U.S. audiences
also were introduced to classical ballet by touring
companies of European dancers. The first American ballet
troupes were founded in the 1930s, when dancers and
choreographers teamed up with visionary lovers of ballet
such as Lincoln Kirstein (1907-1996). Kirstein invited
Russian choreographer George Balanchine (1904-1983) to the
United States in 1933, and the two established the School of
American Ballet, which became the New York City Ballet in
1948. Ballet manager and publicity agent Richard Pleasant
(1909-1961) founded America's second leading ballet
organization, American Ballet Theatre, with dancer and
patron Lucia Chase (1907-1986) in 1940.
Paradoxically, native-born directors like
Pleasant included Russian classics in their repertoires,
while Balanchine announced that his new American company was
predicated on distinguished music and new works in the
classical idiom, not the standard repertory of the past.
Since then, the American ballet scene has been a mix of
classic revivals and original works, choreographed by such
talented former dancers as Jerome Robbins (1918- ), Robert
Joffrey (1930-1988), Eliot Feld (1942- ), Arthur Mitchell
(1934- ), and Mikhail Baryshnikov (1948- ).
ARCHITECTURE
America's unmistakable contribution to
architecture has been the skyscraper, whose bold, thrusting
lines have made it the symbol of capitalist energy. Made
possible by new construction techniques and the invention of
the elevator, the first skyscraper went up in Chicago in
1884.
Many of the most graceful early towers were
designed by Louis Sullivan (1856-1924), America's first
great modern architect. His most talented student was Frank
Lloyd Wright (1869-1959), who spent much of his career
designing private residences with matching furniture and
generous use of open space. One of his best-known buildings,
however, is a public one: the Guggenheim Museum in New York
City.
European architects who emigrated to the
United States before World War II launched what became a
dominant movement in architecture, the International Style.
Perhaps the most influential of these immigrants were Ludwig
Mies van der Rohe (1886-1969) and Walter Gropius
(1883-1969), both former directors of Germany's famous
design school, the Bauhaus. Based on geometric form,
buildings in their style have been both praised as monuments
to American corporate life and dismissed as "glass boxes."
In reaction, younger American architects such as Michael
Graves (1945- ) have rejected the austere, boxy look in
favor of "postmodern" buildings with striking contours and
bold decoration that alludes to historical styles of
architecture.
THE VISUAL ARTS
America's first well-known school of
painting -- the Hudson River school -- appeared in 1820. As
with music and literature, this development was delayed
until artists perceived that the New World offered subjects
unique to itself; in this case the westward expansion of
settlement brought the transcendent beauty of frontier
landscapes to painters' attention.
The Hudson River painters' directness and
simplicity of vision influenced such later artists as
Winslow Homer (1836-1910), who depicted rural America -- the
sea, the mountains, and the people who lived near them.
Middle-class city life found its painter in Thomas Eakins
(1844-1916), an uncompromising realist whose unflinching
honesty undercut the genteel preference for romantic
sentimentalism.
Controversy soon became a way of life for
American artists. In fact, much of American painting and
sculpture since 1900 has been a series of revolts against
tradition. "To hell with the artistic values," announced
Robert Henri (1865-1929). He was the leader of what critics
called the "ash-can" school of painting, after the group's
portrayals of the squalid aspects of city life. Soon the
ash-can artists gave way to modernists arriving from Europe
-- the cubists and abstract painters promoted by the
photographer Alfred Stieglitz (1864-1946) at his Gallery 291
in New York City.
In the years after World War II, a group of
young New York artists formed the first native American
movement to exert major influence on foreign artists:
abstract expressionism. Among the movement's leaders were
Jackson Pollock (1912-1956), Willem de Kooning (1904-1997),
and Mark Rothko (1903-1970). The abstract expressionists
abandoned formal composition and representation of real
objects to concentrate on instinctual arrangements of space
and color and to demonstrate the effects of the physical
action of painting on the canvas.
Members of the next artistic generation
favored a different form of abstraction: works of mixed
media. Among them were Robert Rauschenberg (1925- ) and
Jasper Johns (1930- ), who used photos, newsprint, and
discarded objects in their compositions. Pop artists, such
as Andy Warhol (1930-1987), Larry Rivers (1923- ), and Roy
Lichtenstein (1923- ), reproduced, with satiric care,
everyday objects and images of American popular culture --
Coca-Cola bottles, soup cans, comic strips.
Today artists in America tend not to
restrict themselves to schools, styles, or a single medium.
A work of art might be a performance on stage or a
hand-written manifesto; it might be a massive design cut
into a Western desert or a severe arrangement of marble
panels inscribed with the names of American soldiers who
died in Vietnam. Perhaps the most influential 20th-century
American contribution to world art has been a mocking
playfulness, a sense that a central purpose of a new work is
to join the ongoing debate over the definition of art
itself.
LITERATURE
Much early American writing is derivative:
European forms and styles transferred to new locales. For
example, Wieland and other novels by Charles Brockden
Brown (1771-1810) are energetic imitations of the Gothic
novels then being written in England. Even the well-wrought
tales of Washington Irving (1783-1859), notably "Rip Van
Winkle" and "The Legend of Sleepy Hollow," seem comfortably
European despite their New World settings.
Perhaps the first American writer to produce
boldly new fiction and poetry was Edgar Allan Poe
(1809-1849). In 1835, Poe began writing short stories --
including "The Masque of the Red Death," "The Pit and the
Pendulum," "The Fall of the House of Usher," and "The
Murders in the Rue Morgue" -- that explore previously hidden
levels of human psychology and push the boundaries of
fiction toward mystery and fantasy.
Meanwhile, in 1837, the young Nathaniel
Hawthorne (1804-1864) collected some of his stories as
Twice-Told Tales, a volume rich in symbolism and occult
incidents. Hawthorne went on to write full-length
"romances," quasi-allegorical novels that explore such
themes as guilt, pride, and emotional repression in his
native New England. His masterpiece, The Scarlet Letter,
is the stark drama of a woman cast out of her community for
committing adultery.
Hawthorne's fiction had a profound impact on
his friend Herman Melville (1819-1891), who first made a
name for himself by turning material from his seafaring days
into exotic novels. Inspired by Hawthorne's example,
Melville went on to write novels rich in philosophical
speculation. In Moby-Dick, an adventurous whaling
voyage becomes the vehicle for examining such themes as
obsession, the nature of evil, and human struggle against
the elements. In another fine work, the short novel Billy
Budd, Melville dramatizes the conflicting claims of duty
and compassion on board a ship in time of war. His more
profound books sold poorly, and he had been long forgotten
by the time of his death. He was rediscovered in the early
decades of the 20th century.
In 1836, Ralph Waldo Emerson (1803-1882), an
ex-minister, published a startling nonfiction work called
Nature, in which he claimed it was possible to dispense
with organized religion and reach a lofty spiritual state by
studying and responding to the natural world. His work
influenced not only the writers who gathered around him,
forming a movement known as Transcendentalism, but also the
public, who heard him lecture.
Emerson's most gifted fellow-thinker was
Henry David Thoreau (1817-1862), a resolute nonconformist.
After living mostly by himself for two years in a cabin by a
wooded pond, Thoreau wrote Walden, a book-length
memoir that urges resistance to the meddlesome dictates of
organized society. His radical writings express a
deep-rooted tendency toward individualism in the American
character.
Mark Twain (the pen name of Samuel Clemens,
1835-1910) was the first major American writer to be born
away from the East Coast -- in the border state of Missouri.
His regional masterpieces, the memoir Life on the
Mississippi and the novel Adventures of Huckleberry
Finn, were noted in chapter 2. Twain's style --
influenced by journalism, wedded to the vernacular, direct
and unadorned but also highly evocative and irreverently
funny -- changed the way Americans write their language. His
characters speak like real people and sound distinctively
American, using local dialects, newly invented words, and
regional accents.
Henry James (1843-1916) confronted the Old
World-New World dilemma by writing directly about it.
Although born in New York City, he spent most of his adult
years in England. Many of his novels center on Americans who
live in or travel to Europe. With its intricate, highly
qualified sentences and dissection of emotional nuance,
James's fiction can be daunting. Among his more accessible
works are the novellas "Daisy Miller," about an enchanting
American girl in Europe, and "The Turn of the Screw," an
enigmatic ghost story.
America's two greatest 19th-century poets
could hardly have been more different in temperament and
style. Walt Whitman (1819-1892) was a working man, a
traveler, a self-appointed nurse during the American Civil
War (1861-1865), and a poetic innovator. His magnum opus was
Leaves of Grass, in which he uses a free-flowing
verse and lines of irregular length to depict the
all-inclusiveness of American democracy. Taking that motif
one step further, the poet equates the vast range of
American experience with himself -- and manages not to sound
like a crass egotist. For example, in "Song of Myself," the
long, central poem in Leaves of Grass, Whitman
writes: "These are really the thoughts of all men in all
ages and lands, they are not original with me...."
Whitman was also a poet of the body -- "the
body electric," as he called it. In Studies in Classic
American Literature, the English novelist D.H. Lawrence
wrote that Whitman "was the first to smash the old moral
conception that the soul of man is something `superior' and
`above' the flesh."
Emily Dickinson (1830-1886), on the other
hand, lived the sheltered life of a genteel unmarried woman
in small-town Massachusetts. Within its formal structure,
her poetry is ingenious, witty, exquisitely wrought, and
psychologically penetrating. Her work was unconventional for
its day, and little of it was published during her lifetime.
Many of her poems dwell on death, often with
a mischievous twist. "Because I could not stop for Death,"
one begins, "He kindly stopped for me." The opening of
another Dickinson poem toys with her position as a woman in
a male-dominated society and an unrecognized poet: "I'm
nobody! Who are you? / Are you nobody too?"
At the beginning of the 20th century,
American novelists were expanding fiction's social spectrum
to encompass both high and low life. In her stories and
novels, Edith Wharton (1862-1937) scrutinized the
upper-class, Eastern-seaboard society in which she had grown
up. One of her finest books, The Age of Innocence,
centers on a man who chooses to marry a conventional,
socially acceptable woman rather than a fascinating
outsider. At about the same time, Stephen Crane (1871-1900),
best known for his Civil War novel The Red Badge of
Courage, depicted the life of New York City prostitutes
in Maggie: A Girl of the Streets. And in Sister
Carrie, Theodore Dreiser (1871-1945) portrayed a country
girl who moves to Chicago and becomes a kept woman.
Experimentation in style and form soon
joined the new freedom in subject matter. In 1909, Gertrude
Stein (1874-1946), by then an expatriate in Paris, published
Three Lives, an innovative work of fiction influenced
by her familiarity with cubism, jazz, and other movements in
contemporary art and music.
The poet Ezra Pound (1885-1972) was born in
Idaho but spent much of his adult life in Europe. His work
is complex, sometimes obscure, with multiple references to
other art forms and to a vast range of literature, both
Western and Eastern. He influenced many other poets, notably
T.S. Eliot (1888-1965), another expatriate. Eliot wrote
spare, cerebral poetry, carried by a dense structure of
symbols. In "The Waste Land" he embodied a jaundiced vision
of post-World War I society in fragmented, haunted images.
Like Pound's, Eliot's poetry could be highly allusive, and
some editions of "The Waste Land" come with footnotes
supplied by the poet. Eliot won the Nobel Prize for
literature in 1948.
American writers also expressed the
disillusionment following upon the war. The stories and
novels of F. Scott Fitzgerald (1896-1940) capture the
restless, pleasure-hungry, defiant mood of the 1920s.
Fitzgerald's characteristic theme, expressed poignantly in
The Great Gatsby, is the tendency of youth's golden
dreams to dissolve in failure and disappointment.
Ernest Hemingway (1899-1961) saw violence
and death first-hand as an ambulance driver in World War I,
and the senseless carnage persuaded him that abstract
language was mostly empty and misleading. He cut out
unnecessary words from his writing, simplified the sentence
structure, and concentrated on concrete objects and actions.
He adhered to a moral code that emphasized courage under
pressure, and his protagonists were strong, silent men who
often dealt awkwardly with women. The Sun Also Rises
and A Farewell to Arms are generally considered his
best novels; he won the Nobel Prize for literature in 1954.
In addition to fiction, the 1920s were a
rich period for drama. There had not been an important
American dramatist until Eugene O'Neill (1888-1953) began to
write his plays. Winner of the Nobel Prize for literature in
1936, O'Neill drew upon classical mythology, the Bible, and
the new science of psychology to explore inner life. He
wrote frankly about sex and family quarrels, but his
preoccupation was with the individual's search for identity.
One of his greatest works is Long Day's Journey Into
Night, a harrowing drama, small in scale but large in
theme, based largely on his own family.
Another strikingly original American
playwright was Tennessee Williams (1911-1983), who expressed
his southern heritage in poetic yet sensational plays,
usually about a sensitive woman trapped in a brutish
environment. Several of his plays have been made into films,
including A Streetcar Named Desire and Cat on a
Hot Tin Roof.
Five years before Hemingway, another
American novelist had won the Nobel Prize: William Faulkner
(1897-1962). Faulkner managed to encompass an enormous range
of humanity in Yoknapatawpha, a Mississippi county of his
own invention. He recorded his characters' seemingly
unedited ramblings in order to represent their inner states
-- a technique called "stream of consciousness." (In fact,
these passages are carefully crafted, and their seeming
randomness is an illusion.) He also jumbled time sequences
to show how the past -- especially the slave-holding era of
the South -- endures in the present. Among his great works
are The Sound and the Fury, Absalom, Absalom!, Go Down,
Moses, and The Unvanquished.
Faulkner was part of a southern literary
renaissance that also included such figures as Truman Capote
(1924-1984) and Flannery O'Connor (1925-1964). Although
Capote wrote short stories and novels, fiction and
nonfiction, his masterpiece was In Cold Blood, a
factual account of a multiple murder and its aftermath,
which fused dogged reporting with a novelist's penetrating
psychology and crystalline prose. Other practitioners of the
"nonfiction novel" have included Norman Mailer (1923- ), who
wrote about an antiwar march on the Pentagon in Armies of
the Night, and Tom Wolfe (1931- ), who wrote about
American astronauts in The Right Stuff.
Flannery O'Connor was a Catholic -- and thus
an outsider in the heavily Protestant South in which she
grew up. Her characters are Protestant fundamentalists
obsessed with both God and Satan. She is best known for her
tragicomic short stories.
The 1920s had seen the rise of an artistic
black community in the New York City neighborhood of Harlem.
The period called the Harlem Renaissance produced such
gifted poets as Langston Hughes (1902-1967), Countee Cullen
(1903-1946), and Claude McKay (1889-1948). The novelist Zora
Neale Hurston (1903-1960) combined a gift for storytelling
with the study of anthropology to write vivid stories from
the African-American oral tradition. Through such books as
the novel Their Eyes Were Watching God -- about the
life and marriages of a light-skinned African-American woman
-- Hurston influenced a later generation of black women
novelists.
After World War II, a new receptivity to
diverse voices brought black writers into the mainstream of
American literature. James Baldwin (1924-1987) expressed his
disdain for racism and his celebration of sexuality in
Giovanni's Room. In Invisible Man, Ralph Ellison
(1914-1994) linked the plight of African Americans, whose
race can render them all but invisible to the majority white
culture, with the larger theme of the human search for
identity in the modern world.
In the 1950s the West Coast spawned a
literary movement, the poetry and fiction of the "Beat
Generation," a name that referred simultaneously to the
rhythm of jazz music, to a sense that post-war society was
worn out, and to an interest in new forms of experience
through drugs, alcohol, and Eastern mysticism. Poet Allen
Ginsberg (1926-1997) set the tone of social protest and
visionary ecstasy in "Howl," a Whitmanesque work that begins
with this powerful line: "I saw the best minds of my
generation destroyed by madness...." Jack Kerouac
(1922-1969) celebrated the Beats' carefree, hedonistic
life-style in his episodic novel On the Road.
From Irving and Hawthorne to the present
day, the short story has been a favorite American form. One
of its 20th-century masters was John Cheever (1912-1982),
who brought yet another facet of American life into the
realm of literature: the affluent suburbs that have grown up
around most major cities. Cheever was long associated with
The New Yorker, a magazine noted for its wit and
sophistication.
Although trend-spotting in literature that
is still being written can be dangerous, the recent
emergence of fiction by members of minority groups has been
striking. Here are only a few examples. Native American
writer Leslie Marmon Silko (1948- ) uses colloquial language
and traditional stories to fashion haunting, lyrical poems
such as "In Cold Storm Light." Amy Tan (1952- ), of Chinese
descent, has described her parents' early struggles in
California in The Joy Luck Club. Oscar Hijuelos
(1951- ), a writer with roots in Cuba, won the 1991 Pulitzer
Prize for his novel The Mambo Kings Play Songs of Love.
In a series of novels beginning with A Boy's Own Story,
Edmund White (1940- ) has captured the anguish and comedy of
growing up homosexual in America. Finally, African-American
women have produced some of the most powerful fiction of
recent decades. One of them, Toni Morrison (1931- ), author
of Beloved and other works, won the Nobel Prize for
literature in 1993, only the second American woman to be so
honored.
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