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draft 2/1/2009

Green-Wood Cemetery - October 2008

"Angels and Accordions"

A project by Robert A. Baron
Studiolo-Pix

A slide show inspired by the choreography of

Dance Theater Etcetera
(www.dtetc.org, inactive:1/28/09)

note: The following text is intended to be seen
after viewing the "Angels and Accordions" slide show
for which a link is provided here: A&A It refers to
images not shown below.


The "slide show" called "Angels and Accordions," owes its inspiration to Martha Bowers' Dance Theater Etcetera's site-specific performance of the same name. "A&A" has been presented annually at the Green-Wood Cemetery in Brooklyn, New York, a National Historic Landmark. I attended the performance of October 4, 2008, having no idea of what was in store; I was mesmerized by the beauty of the cemetery and the powerful imagery of the choreography.

At the Green-Wood performance a body of "visitors," essentially an audience, is guided along a predetermined path by ushers bearing two giant umbrellas -- one to mark the front of the procession, and the other to identify the end. If the audience remains within these markers they will see the production as intended, which has been calculated to be seen in the intervening space between the passing ushers and their umbrellas. Once passed, the actors move ahead and reform themselves as new tableaux.

I suggest that readers of these paragraphs view the slide show first. (If you haven't seen the show yet, you may use this link:
A&A.) The "slide show" does not attempt to reproduce or document the "A&A" work as much as it mines suggestive episodes from the sequence of tableaux -- using some of its tableaux vivants (an odd word to use here) while incorporating views of Green-Wood Cemetery into its theme. Its purpose, method and functions, while related, nevertheless, of necessity, differ from those of its model. In particular, it rearranges some of the sequences and uses the power of photography to focus attention, develop content and offer meanings not apparent or not suggested by the live action of the imagery.

PART ONE

The slide show is divided into three phases or movements. In the first, angels guard the tombs of the deceased and inhabit the trees as a sign of their presence and watchful ambition. It should be noted that some of the angels are shown in pairs -- one asleep and the other awake -- as if they were taking shifts better to execute their responsibilities as protectors. Either sleeping or awake, with faint pointing gestures, some of the angels guide the "visitors" toward the right, the direction of the procession. The music for Part One is taken from Bach's Cello Suite: Number 2 "The Prelude." (None of the original accordion music has been captured.)

Part One begins with several views of Green-Wood's imposing entry gate. This "gothic" style structure is shown from several vantage-points, all of which are from within the cemetery grounds. Symbolically, it implies that we are within a sacred precinct where all beings are sanctified and in some way consecrated -- at least for the duration of the metaphor unfolding around us. You will note that the images at this point are all monochrome and tend to fade -- or better put -- slide from one tonality to another.

From my perspective, these sepia-tone monochromatic images serve
as the principal metaphor of the "slide show" presentation. They function as a remembrance of the past, partly reproductions, partly tangible manifestations, like objects, or old pictures in a family album. They contrast with the color images which are intended to signify the current intangible and fleeting experiences of daily life as formed by habit and simple observation, but, here, of course, within the cemetery. Students of theology may want to think of the monochrome transformations as a kind of pictorial exegesis -- an attempt to locate meaning and significance in observed reality. In this way the slide show presents three levels of observation: 1) the visitor's viewpoint -- watching the show unfold, 2) The photographer's view, watching the show and watching the visitors watching, and 3) The exegetical level, in which meaning -- the "invisible" dimension -- becomes paramount.

The high steeple of the entry gate, as many people have noticed, serves as a nesting area for Brooklyn parrots. The steeple slides from monochrome to fully lit by sunlight, and then in the next slide folds back again into an ominously sepia-toned skyscape. Not surprisingly, this sequence is a suggestive metaphor about living in a life and death environment. Along the way we find a variety of tombs in both the classical and Egyptian styles. We also see the tall columnar monument erected in honor of fallen Civil War soldiers. On this day it is in the custody of angelic caretakers. In this context, using architectural references to ancient times is one way of claiming your right to possess your share of eternity.

The first "tableau" we see after leaving the gateway takes place on a pyramidal tomb set in an Egyptianizing style. Visitors have gathered around it and are occasionally highlighted by their brightly colored garments. But soon their bright clothing, and everything else -- for that matter -- fades to monochrome, and then they, themselves, are rendered invisible in front of the pyramid's foundation stones. This is the last appearance of the tourists in this section. (When viewing the "slide show", perhaps it is best to think of them as pilgrims, or as actors in the performance -- not "tourists," for they are as much part of the show as is the cast; we watch them as much as we watch the performance.)

Among other scenes in Part One is an unusual group of angels uncharacteristically walking to the left rather than to the right. Less like angels and without expression, they appear to be zombies -- the arisen dead. This time their images fade from sepia to a stark black and white -- as if to say (within the symbology used in this show) that they are not to be remembered -- they are not among the chosen.

As Part One comes to its end, the music begins to breathe long and heavily, as if the music itself, is about to expire. The images of the walking dead and the tomb that follows pulses with the final strains of Yo Yo Ma's cello.


After Bach's Cello Suite concludes, we see a variant of the Fabbricotti monument that appeared earlier. On the Fabbricotti stone, one angel sits alert at the base, while another sleeps on top of it.  Still in the darkness of sleep, this angel instinctively points to the right.

I call the final image of Part One a variant because the formula is similar: Two
"angels" are resting on a tree. The standing angel is awake and the seated one asleep. They remain on view for the time it takes them to transform from a semblance of being live into the morphed state of being remembered or imagined -- transformed from color to sepia -- like a faded photograph. a dim memory or a poignant dream. The air is void of sound and the viewer has nothing with which to divert his attention from the visualization. In their monochrome silence, they thus become tokens or emblems of their given role and presumed significance. Pointing to the right it would seem they have an undisclosed purpose; but for their observers, the awake angel seem to suggest that it is time for us to move on.

PART TWO

In Part Two the "visitors" return; Schubert's music, to which Part Two is set, is not like the dirge we heard in Part One. One might even say it is rather jovial, that is, were it not relentlessly driven by a repeating rhythm of baroque intensity. The first tomb we encounter sets the mood. Two accordionists accompany a sleeping angel. Thus, at first, the angels still honor their commission to protect the tombs of the deceased, but now find themselves accompanied by music. They are transitional, for further on we see that they have become spirits of the field and watch over the broad campus of graves as they romp through it to the music of a lone accordionist. But, soon enough the field fades into a deep sepia and appears, itself, to be preparing for sleep. Time, it would seem, is a deciding factor even here, among the dead.

But as darkness falls over the field, the scene shifts, daylight  has returned, and the music suddenly becomes more intense and highly repetitive; we are greeted by two angels slowly circumnavigating a stone monument. To me, this scene recalls those large medieval town clocks one finds in east European cities -- those that exhibit mechanical figures rotating around their base, once, on each striking of the hour. Metaphorically, I interpret this tableau as indicative of the cycle of time and, as in some beliefs, of the cyclical nature of life and death itself. In Part Two, time is losing its linear hold on the human condition.

[Note: See, for example the Prague Astronomical Clock.]

Next appears a quaint gothic chapel in a landscape -- even in color it is more fantasy than architecture. A figure is walking across the lawn; but here, as in so many of the other scenes, it turns to shades of sepia, as if to imply that even the constructions and establishments to which we pin our hopes and yearnings eventually decay into figments of the imagination and fragments of the past. The dominant theme is restated. It is that of the memento mori. Remember death, for all things turn to dust; life cannot be preserved forever.

[An afterthought: I should have removed the live figures in the sepia version and let them fade out too. Then it might have evoked memories of works like the famous M.R.James ghost story, "The Mezzotint."]

As if to put this thought into another context, the next image shows two youths facing each other as they sit on pedestals at the summit of a flight of stairs. Obviously lovers (or shy lovers) the boy (the only male angel in the troop) is holding a carnation to give his partner. If you've watched carefully, you might have noticed the carnation gain color before the image fades out. It is subtle; don't miss it. In common lore carnations signify love and marriage, but they also are symbolic of remembrance and, as such, are frequently used as decorations at funerals. Strictly, its name refers to the "incarnation," and the red color is said to evoke the blood of Christ.

The music drives us into the next set of images. In them we find a group of angels cavorting and dancing among the trees -- as if they are exercising their ability to fly joyfully through the air. One, though, appears to be having trouble, loses control and drops, head-first to the ground. Is she a novice? Following these, we see an angel ardently praying ("supplicating" seems more appropriate) before a stock sculpture of a saint. A scene on one of Green-Wood's lakes takes an oriental turn -- as if to cover all the bases, ecumenically speaking.

Part Two continues with a festive romp among the tombs located before the cemetery's main chapel. The umbrella ushers who have guided us thus far relinquish their role as bookends and now direct us toward the open space on the other side of the chapel. There the angels have gathered, the accordionists have formed a small orchestra, and the angels run back and forth in praise of whomever they must. The hill upon which they dance is reminiscent of the Elysian fields of the ancients -- home of the blessed after they have passed from this life. The angels are busy and run back and forth in a frantic flurry of arm-waving. Have they received advanced word that the Second Coming is at hand and their work-load is about to increase dramatically?

This section ends with views of the audience and the chapel architecture, which we notice is Byzantinesque in style -- of significant interest in contrast to the gothic cemetery gate. As if we've come full circle, the chapel image fades into the busy gothic meanderings of the cemetery entry gate -- the same that we saw at the start of the slide show; but, this time, for the first time, it is shown in in natural color, as if to suggest that the circle through which we have journeyed -- as a metaphor -- offers some hope of redemption and recuperation -- that life after death is not necessarily unlike life before death. The music follows suit. Vibrant and agitated to fit the rhythmic turbulence of the Byzantine building, it contrasts to the slow, thoughtful strains we remember as having characterized the cemetery gate at the start of Part One.

PART THREE

As Part Two is about to close, credits appear. However, they are not placed at the show's conclusion, where one might expect to find them. Schubert's music (the fourth movement of Quartet No. 9 in G-minor -- an opus posthumous, ironically) ends in a classical manner with an extended teasing conclusion. In the slide show, it is juxtaposed with a scene of a road leading out of the cemetery. From this, and having already seen the credits, you might conclude that the show is over, especially since you've already been warned that "The End (is near)" -- however, the ending is false, false if you believe the music and false if you believe the picture. This is the road not taken -- the road that you must not take, for after a few moments of darkness, you are shown the announcement of a Part Three -- informing us of an impending "Curtain Call," and a "Finale."

That the Curtain Call precedes the Finale should suggest that the latter is radically different from what has been presented so far. It is.

The Curtain Call is composed of actors standing in formation before the entry gate of the cemetery which serves as an
episcenia -- a rear stage wall. One of them, at the front, stoops to pick up a bouquet of flowers. In reality, this is a scene photographed when the actors first emerged at the start of "Angels and Accordions;" but, here the scene is repurposed and used to mark the end of Part Two and the beginning of Part Three. In the current context, it signifies that from now on the angel-actors will be off stage.

The curtain-call photo begins in monochromatic sepia; we've seen it before; but now, with a bright flash of white light, it abruptly turns to color. As the gate returns to its original color, we enter the conclusion of Part Two. But this backdrop soon fades to white, and as it does, the image of a smiling angel emerges as if from nowhere. True, she made a brief appearance earlier, when Part Two began, but then, quickly, it was she who faded away. Now she comes back stamped with a supernatural air, as might be surmised by the powerful lightning strikes and as dangerous pulses of a negative light jar our expectations. In my mind they are reminiscent of published images of atomic bomb blasts, and, as such, evoke a vision of a final holocaust. Barring that thought, you might easily presume that her assignment is to survey everything that passes in this district of the departed, and, perhaps, by implication, in all districts of the departed; but, here, certainly, she is transcendental and possesses an unworldly aura. She is the invisible, inevitable, and commanding spirit of the place -- ethereal, immaterial and omnipresent. Even so, she smiles. She seems less an actor and more a presence. There is no stage for her to inhabit. Viewers, including this author, are made uneasy by her appearance and are annoyed by the length of time she remains on screen. However, the effect is purposeful because it makes people suspect that she may be ushering in an apocalyptic event.

The theme music for this part is taken from an early work by Phillip Glass. Its tone transcends place and time to imply that the protagonist has sweeping power and authority over what we have witnessed. If you listen and watch carefully, you'll see that the music and visuals are synchronized with each other. Music, as we have come to know it, is gone, replaced by a song of subtle variations and incessantly unremitting celestial rhythms. The music implies that, perhaps, she is the keeper of the gates and the judge of what lies before her. Music and images end simultaneously and abruptly, which is to imply that the narrative we have just witnessed may not have an ending at all.
 

CREDITS

Music

Part One: J. S. Bach, Cello  Suite No. 2, Prelude, Yo-Yo Ma, Cello

Part Two:
Franz Schubert, Quartet No. 9.  in G Miner (Op. Posth.), Fourth Movement, Tokyo String Quartet

Part Three: Phillip Glass, Music in Twelve Parts, No. 4, The Phillip Glass Ensemble

Help, Suggestions, Critiques and Advice

With much thanks and appreciation for suggestions and advice: Ruth Baron, Ron Carran, Deborah Cohen, Barbara Espenschied, Walter Kimmel, Alexis Levitin, Elinor Stecker-Orel, Carol Selkin, Anastasia Tompkins and Ford Weisberg among others.

Link: Green-Wood Cemetery: The Arch 2006
Link: Green-Wood Cemetery: The Arch 2008 Summer
Link: NYC, Ch 13 -- The City Concealed - Video - Green-Wood Cemetery