Published
Monday, October 27, 2003
For
Crying Out Loud: Kivy Launches Lecture Series
By Lolita
Paiewonsky
APPIAN STAFF WRITER
You don't need to leave Appian Way to hear provocative
lectures from renowned arts scholars or behold professional-quality
performances by fellow students.
Arts in Education students, as well as other interested members of
the community, will assemble six times this semester for the John
Landrum Bryant Lecture and Performance Series, enjoying regular doses
of arts "medication": from music and dance to talks on
qualitative research methodology.
The maiden lecture of the Series brought Rutgers University
Professor Peter Kivy to the star-shaped lecture hall, Larsen G-08,
December 9, to present
his paper: For Crying Out Loud: Art Tears, Real Tears, and the Problem
of Absolute Music.
"Absolute music" is an art form for which beauty and comprehension
is dependent on its structure alone, rather than on lyrics, attempts
to imitate nature, or references to historical or fictional events.
Kivy is a champion of this art form, and his lecture challenged
the ideas of his contemporary, Yale Professor Nicholas Wolterstorff,
who has recently cast skepticism on whether such music can elicit
the emotional reaction of "real tears," rather than simply "art
tears." The Vietnam Memorial Wall and a memorial concert for the victims
of the September 11th tragedy elicited "real tears," Wolterstorff
asserts, because of the emotional response to the memory of lost
loved ones.
Visitors to the Vietnam Memorial Wall were not simply responding
to art for art's sake during the visit; instead, they physically
touched and kissed the wall where the names of family and friends
were inscribed. Those actions removed the wall from the category
of "mere" art, Wolterstorff argued. Wolterstorff believes - and here's where Kivy gets ruffled - that
the best that "absolute
music" can elicit is "mere" art tears, never "real" tears,
because there is no reference, no title, no lyrics, no plot -- nothing to engage
the audience on any level other than the "mere" sound of the music
for its own sake. Kivy went on to dispute the dichotomy of emotional and intellectual
responses to music, saying that he does not see them necessarily
at "cross-purposes." Kivy also rejected the argument that there is an easy distinction
between the kinds of tears shed during a performance, preferring
instead to view the music's
power to enthrall us as a mystery, regardless of which strings it tugs within
us. Traditionally, at the conclusion of each lecture in the Landrum
Series, masters students create, dedicate, and present original
works in response to, and in
appreciation of, the guest lecturer. Two students in the Arts in Education program, Tonja King and Randy
Wong, offered a performance piece consisting of an original vocal
and musical arrangement. Wong played the oboe in accompaniment to King's spoken and musical
rendition. She recited a poem entitled Chaos in my Coffee, originally written
by her several years ago, to which she added several lines pertinent
to the Lecturer's presentation
("Was Mozart touched by Heaven's hand?" "Can Eroica inspire the
common man?"). She broke the words of the poem by interjecting a verse from Schiller's
Ode to Joy that also forms the lyrics in Beethoven's Symphony
# 9. This she sang in
German in her gorgeous soprano voce.
Randy played to Tonja's vocal renditions with a mixture of jazz-influenced
improvisations and several classical musical references (excerpts),
including Mozart's Symphony
#39, the Eroica from Beethoven's Symphony #3; and the 4th Movement from Beethoven's
9th (with the Schiller recitative).
At the conclusion of Tonja and Randy's performance, the audience
responded with
both "arts applause" and "real applause." Since Kivy's lecture, the Landrum Series has hosted two more guests:
Matthew Pearl, author of the best-selling historical mystery, The
Dante Club, and Anna
Kindler, dean of the School of Creative Arts, Sciences and Technology at the
Hong Kong Institute of Education. Upcoming speakers include George Geahigan, coordinator of the Art
Education Program at Purdue University (Nov. 4), Elizabeth Garber,
who will speak on the intersections
of social justice and art education (Nov. 25), and Elliot Eisner, professor
of education and of art at Stanford, and author of the 2002 book,
The Arts and the
Creation of Mind. Lolita Paiewonsky is an Ed.M. candidate in the Arts in Education
program.
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