Art and Spies
by
Charley
Reese
by Charley Reese
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Art is art,
whether it's a Hawaiian girl painted on a piece of velvet or sunflowers
painted on canvas by van Gogh.
It's a waste
of time to say this piece isn't art and that piece is. It's even
a waste of time to say this piece is good art and that one is bad
art. All one can honestly say is that he likes this picture and
doesn't like that one.
Beauty really
is in the eye of the beholder, and beauty is all that art is about.
That's true even when we stretch the definition of art to include
literature, dance and music. How we respond to it is all that matters.
Art has, like
everything else, become a business, and the business of art is to
jack up the price. That's done by people making pronouncements.
Like any other salesman, the critic usually decides the art in his
own or his pal's inventory is always the best.
An artist
who later became a spy told me a funny story about a New York
Times art critic in the 1920s. The artist had been invited to
exhibit two paintings at the Brooklyn Museum. He had chosen to paint
two new ones during the weekend and was rushing to deliver the canvases
when the wind caught his coat and smeared one of the paintings.
When he got
to the museum, the art critic was there, and before the artist could
apologize for ruining one of the paintings, the critic began, in
the flowery language such people use, to praise lavishly the smeared
painting. Well, the artist was smart enough to keep his mouth shut.
As proof that it really happened, he showed me a yellowed clipping
from the Times in which the guy babbled on about the wonderful technique
of this new artist.
Later on as
a spy, the artist showed the same good sense. He was assigned to
Sweden, a neutral country, during World War II, and after a while
he noticed a German spy following him. He confronted the German
and said words to the effect of "Look, we both have a comfortable
and safe billet. If either of us takes the other out, no telling
where the survivor will end up. You might end up in Russia, or I
might end up in the Balkans. Why don't we just agree to get along?"
And so they did. Sweden was a good place to spend World War II.
After the
war, the man returned to art and became commercially successful
as a wildlife illustrator.
Another friend
who spent his career as a Central Intelligence Agency case officer
said that at one time the bureaucrats in Langley decided that classified
CIA reports on the Eastern bloc countries should be shared with
allied intelligence agencies. My friend tried to convince them that
the head of intelligence in the small Central American country where
he was stationed really wasn't interested in anything going on in
Bulgaria or Poland.
"The
head of intelligence was the president's brother-in-law, and the
'safe' where he kept classified documents was a cardboard box under
his bed," my friend said. The really funny part is that the
entire impoverished, broken-down little country wasn't worth the
cost of an American embassy, much less a CIA station.
Whether
one talks of art or spies, the world rarely operates the way many
people imagine that it does. It's a lot more cynical and sleazy,
often corrupt, even vicious, and sometimes stupid. If one wishes
to be an idealist, it's probably a good idea to become a hermit
at the same time.
July
2, 2007
Charley
Reese [send
him mail] has been a journalist for 49 years.
©
2007 by King Features Syndicate, Inc.
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