Ask a Silly Question at the British Museum
This question posed by a member of the Royal Shakespeare Company gave NeilMacGregor, director of the British Museum, the idea for “Shakespeare: Staging the World,” which just
opened. It is widely agreed that MacGregor is an intelligent, erudite fellow
but whatever made him think such a dopey question could serve as the armature
for a major exhibition. A bookish show of diaries or essays by articulate,
self-aware playgoers might have had a shot. Without them, the result was likely
to be a lot of hot air. And that is what
this vaunted collaboration between the BM and the RSC turns out to be.
Actors have a well
documented adoration for their own words but, usually, they aren’t altogether rewarding
to listen in on. But terrific actors reciting Shakespeare now that is a very
different thing. In what the BM calls “a
series of new digital interventions,”—video clips to you and me—provide... HarrietWalter speaks as Cleopatra, Sir Antony Sher as Shylock, Sir Ian McKellan as
Prospero and Paterson Joseph as Brutus. I fear it sounds ungrateful but the
result was irritating rather than inspiring. These performers and their
declaiming kept popping up out of the dark as I crept around trying to figure out what the 200 or so paintings
and objects were going to tell me about Shakespeare. (I wasn’t expecting illumination
about the preposterous conceit of reading theatre goers minds.) Very soon I
felt all the theatrics were so much noise. What a waste.
As for the objects
themselves… Jacopo de’Barbari’s vast
woodcut map of Venice (1.3 x 2.8) is always terrific to look at with its
steeple top view of every house, convent, church and garden in the city. It was
published in 1500; Shakespeare was born more than 60 years later. Okay, call
this a quibble. How about this one: Shakespeare set plays in beautiful Venice
but he never actually went there. So why this map? Even if he had been there what
would this map tell us about his reaction to it? Most London playgoers would
not have been to Venice, either. I enjoyed studying the map and I think most
anyone who’s been lost in the city’s maze of alleys will, too. It is fun to see
what has changed and how much has not. I always play the ridiculous came of
trying to find the palace where I was lucky enough to live even though I know
that I won’t find it. It is on the Fondamenta Nuove which was made from
landfill after de’Barberi drew his map.
Neil MacGregor is
an historian with strong religious commitment. His best exhibitions reflect
this. The First Emperor and Hadrian were terrific. So was the beautiful show
about reliquaries or holy jewels as I think of them. (Here are links to my Economist review of both: FirstEmperor; Treasures of Heaven.) Shah ‘Abbaswas a nightmare for me. The relatively few objects on view were treasures that
were meant to introduce a neophyte like me to the Persian ruler’s importance. The
carpets were fabulous but all I learned was that a rich, powerful, ambitious
Muslim gave expensive gifts to important religious sites; a practice well known
among similarly powerful Christians and Jews. I got a headache trying to find
something to say in the Economist story I was committed to write. Thankfully I
eventually had a brain wave; I ignored the exhibition and instead compared the
portrait of Robert Shirley in it with another large portrait of the Englishman
on view in the Van Dyke then at Tate Britain. (At BM below with his wife.) If I learned almost nothing from the Shah ‘Abbas
exhibition, I learned less from “Shakespeare: Staging the World.”
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