âImmersive Van Goghâ Has Upsides and Downsides, Explains Art Prof
April 16, 2021
- Author
- Jay Pfeifer
During a trip to Paris a few years ago, Art Professor C. Shaw Smith visited LâAtelier des LumiĂ©res, a cavernous space that pioneered projecting the works of legendary artists in massive, high-resolution formats.
Smithâs timing was perfect; he used the experience to close the final chapter of the textbook he was working onâPalimpsests of Patrimony: A Concise History of Art and Architecture in Franceâand now, the installations he viewed in France are touring North America.
, and 13 other American cities, in June. The Charlotte installation will be set up in Camp North End, a one-time Ford plant, from June 17 through Sept. 12.
But how does such a modern presentation square with Van Goghâs actual work? âThe Starry Night,â one of Van Goghâs most recognizable masterpieces measures only 30 inches by 36 inches when seen in person at the Museum of Modern Art in New York City. The Immersive Van Gogh installation will reproduce Van Goghâs paintings across 300,000 cubic feetâwith added animation.
Smith, the Joel O. Conarroe Professor of Art, shares his thoughts.
What was your reaction to the exhibit you saw in France?
It is spectacular. Itâs kind of like Mercedes Stadium in Atlanta. Itâs almost dizzying. Youâre overwhelmed by the technology.
As a purist of these things, it does upset me a little bit.
The images are 20 feet high and, of course, the real paintings are not that big. The danger is that society focuses on the simulated experience. It is spectacular, but it can take the place of the original. It can manipulate that reality.
Does this immersive presentation distort the experience?
It goes both ways. You lose scale in the simulation. I canât tell you how many students Iâve had who would say, âI didnât realize you could see the brushstrokesâ after seeing one of Van Goghâs paintings in person. And thatâs really whatâs essential.
In the original works, what youâre really talking about is the hand. In this case, youâre talking about the eye. The immersive presentation is a way to create accessibility and the spectacle. It has very little to do with the art itself.
The simulation animates his paintings, too; you can see his famous sunflowers grow, so it plays with things that are well beyond the scope of the painting. A purist would say thatâs bad. One side of me agrees. On the other side, I see it as popularizing.
Technology, however, has always shaped how art is viewed. There was a time when photographs were novel as well, right?
Art history as we know it today would not exist if we didnât have simulacra like the Immersive Van Gogh exhibit. Until about the early 20th century, art history was limited to rich, white, aristocratic people because there werenât replicas. You had to travel to see the art. Who collects art and who gets to see it is constantly changing.
This is especially true in America. The discipline of art history was built on having access to reproductions. There was little art in Americaâthatâs changed, obviouslyâand you had to travel to museums.
When I first started grad school in the mid-1970s, there were still teachers who would not show you colored reproductions of paintings. They would show you a black and white one because they didnât want to show you an imperfect impression. Now, color reproduction has improved so much, you can get much closer. But itâs never the same [as the original].
How do you separate Van Goghâs work with its ubiquity? Weâve seen his painting so many times, in so many contexts.
Whenever I teach DaVinci and the âMona Lisa,â one of the things I always say is that you canât see the âMona Lisaâ anymore. And thatâs because youâve seen it so many timesâon t-shirts, mouse pads and commercials. Youâre looking through all that stuff that filters in and changes your expectations for when you see the painting. If you go see it at the Louvre, it can be a downer because itâs not slick. Itâs a painting of a Florentine woman.
Itâs almost as if thereâs a halo around the originalâyouâre looking through all these versions of it, and youâre supposed to be in awe of its originality.
Whatâs one thing that is present in the original that even a spectacular reproduction of a Van Gogh will not show you?
Even really good photographs donât show the brush strokes. Thereâs a ridge thatâs created by the paint itself; he would use this very heavy impasto technique. You can see the brush strokes in relief. If you put a light on either side of the painting, you would see shadows created by the relief of the paint texture.
You donât see that in the exhibitâs images, as I recall. The sense of the human being who created the painting is diminished.