Michael J. Lewis, in an article on architecture entitled
The Decline of American Monuments and Memorials, gives his opinion of why American art is uncomfortable with itself and unable to approach coherent greatness. Speaking of both the plastic arts and the written, he says:
"Allegory requires an imaginative act, and is literary, whereas our
culture is uncomfortable with figurative language. This began around
1977, the moment the language censors began to attack phrases like “Man
does not live on bread alone,” asking “What about women?” A painful
literalism set in, which is hostile to figurative language in speech and
to abstract allegory in art. Nowadays we tend to think literally rather
than literarily, which explains why Frederick Hart had to portray the
American military experience in Vietnam by means of three men of three
distinct races—and why a women’s memorial was subsequently added. [Even though to the 58,000 male soldiers killed there were only 7 women killed.] The
fear of leaving someone or something out is hostile to the allegorical
impulse, which seeks not to itemize but to generalize, and to speak not
specific truths but great truths. It is not surprising that a culture
ill at ease with the notion of absolute truth would find it very
difficult to make monuments that show urgency and conviction."
HT: Hillsdale College
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