New Yorker 前天 18:23
In Defense of the Traditional Review
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本文探讨了在当代媒体环境下,艺术评论(特别是传统书面评论)的独特价值和不可替代性。文章批评了部分媒体(如《纽约时报》)削弱评论、转向其他形式的文化报道的趋势,认为这种做法是对艺术本身的削弱。作者强调,评论不仅是消费指南,更是连接艺术与公众的桥梁,其核心在于独立的、个人的、深入的体验和评价。评论通过其前瞻性和历史性视角,能够激发公众对艺术的热情,并为其他艺术报道形式奠定坚实基础,是推动艺术发展和公众理解的关键。

📰 评论作为艺术的基石:文章认为,书面评论是艺术报道中最具进步性的形式,它源于批评家与艺术作品的直接个人接触,并触及作品的经济和社会影响。评论的独特性在于其审美和社会的双重属性,它既是消费指南,也是保护公众免受商业宣传侵害的独立声音。

💡 独立性与深度:作者指出,许多取代评论的报道形式(如采访、报道性文章)往往缺乏独立性,倾向于放大艺术家自身的声音或市场营销信息。而真正的评论则能深入作品本身,进行细致的评估,即便在商业化浪潮中,也能展现艺术的无限潜力和深刻的个人体验。

⏳ 超越时空的价值:评论并非仅仅是对当下事件的记录,它更是一种跨越时空的对话。优秀的评论能够深入作品的内涵,挖掘其历史意义和未来潜力,即便作品已问世多年,仍能点燃读者的兴趣和热情,拓宽他们的艺术视野。

🚀 评论是其他形式的基础:文章强调,评论是其他艺术报道形式(如随笔、视频、播客)的根基。通过深入的评论,批评家得以积累对艺术的深刻理解,为更广泛的探讨奠定基础。没有评论的支撑,其他形式的文化报道可能流于表面,缺乏实质内容。

💖 情感与启发的载体:评论的核心在于情感的传递和灵魂的触动,它能够唤醒读者内心深处对艺术的热爱和共鸣。负责任的评论不仅是对作品的评价,也是一次自我反思的过程,旨在通过细腻的表达,将艺术的体验延伸至读者的生命之中。

Last week, when the Times announced a shakeup of its arts desk that involved reassigning four of its critics—of theatre, TV, pop music, and classical music—to other roles, the reaction in the media and arts worlds was one of dismay. Even more disturbing than the personnel moves, though, was the reasoning given by the paper’s culture editor, Sia Michel, in her memo about the decision, which couched the move in terms of an ongoing effort to “expand” the Times’ cultural coverage “beyond the traditional review.” There are many worthwhile ways to write about the arts, but her sniping at reviews suggests a faux expansion that would actually be a grave diminution. Michel’s desire for a variety of formats, including video, is well founded but one-sided; the practice of criticism should be as wide-ranging as possible and constantly growing, but it shouldn’t lose its center, which is the written review.

Pace my own headline, this is not a defense; I’m not spreading my arms out in front of traditional reviews to protect them from insult or attack. Rather, I’m advocating for them, not in order to preserve the status quo or to revive past practices but to advance the cause of art itself—because reviews, far from being conservative (as Michel’s words imply), are the most inherently progressive mode of arts writing. When writing reviews, critics are in the position of the public: watching a movie, attending a concert, seeing a play, buying a record. Reviews are rooted in the most fundamental unit of the art business—the personal encounter with individual works (or exhibits of many works)—and in the economic implications of that encounter. The specificity of the review is both aesthetic and social. For starters, it’s a consumer guide, an intrinsic variety of service journalism. Critics are simultaneously consumers and avatars of consumers; as Pauline Kael wrote in 1971, in The New Yorker, “Without a few independent critics, there’s nothing between the public and the advertisers.” What’s commercially crucial about reviews, which serve as something like a consumer-protection file, is precisely this independence, both editorial and textual.

Independence is what’s usually missing from whatever takes the place of reviews in cultural journalism. For instance, reported pieces tone down uninhibitedly opinionated expression and, instead, turn the microphone over to the artists themselves and sometimes to others involved in a given project (producers, gallerists, publishers, and so on)—in other words, to parties with vested interests. The bulk of interviews done to coincide with the release of new work should be rightly understood as part of a marketing plan. Such interviews and quotes are generally short on candor. There are exceptions, but, in the age of social media, when a loose remark risks dominating the narrative of, say, a movie’s or a record’s release, there are ever fewer of them. The result is interviews that shunt coverage toward personalities, toward the glitzy allure of celebrity journalism. They reward and amplify self-promotion rather than illuminating the new work for a potential audience.

What’s lost in such diluted coverage is proper assessment of the basic cultural unit. Just as the individual work is what individual artists—whether directors, actors, crew, or producers—create at a given moment, it’s also how viewers fundamentally seek out works: one at a time. And what a review embodies, above all, is one viewer’s experience of it. The essence of the review is evaluation, which of course doesn’t imply the crude simplicity of a thumbs-up or thumbs-down. (There’s a special pleasure for critics in hearing from readers who are unsure whether to take a particular review as positive or negative.) Even as a review confronts a work’s commercial role, it also embodies the opposite—a work’s potential vastness, the possibly overwhelming and transformative impact of a single viewing or listening.

Although the journalistic review responds to the culture business’s short-term demands for novelty, it isn’t a product but a process—a one-on-one engagement that’s both tightly focussed and free, as free as an essay (of which it’s a subset). Other works by the same artist, or in the same genre, or that offer any significant reference or connection; relevant social and political history; reflections or implications to other art forms; aspects of the artists’ lives—and, for that matter, of the critics’ lives—all are fair game. A review is as capacious as the mind—and the audacity—of a critic. Its only limits are those of a critic’s own imagination, and of editors’ tolerance for whatever expansion and experimentation a critic may hazard. A review is whatever a work of art brings to mind; everything is criticism.

That’s also why reviews, even when linked to the immediate availability of a particular work or event, leap beyond that narrow context and offer a chance to live on, to entice and inspire readers without access to the event in question or coming too late for it. For instance, it’s a fundamental error of editors and reviewers alike to consider classical-music concert reviews as mere accounts of performers and performances. I’ve written some, and the main subject of a review of a performance of, say, a Beethoven symphony isn’t the musicians but Beethoven and the symphony. A classical review of merit weighs in on the meaning and the significance of Beethoven, makes a persuasive case for even performing Beethoven nearly two centuries after his death. Or, to put it differently, critics who take Beethoven for granted are doing injustices to readers, Beethoven, and music—whereas those whose reviews reach deep into the music itself and renew knowledge, interest, and passion in regard to Beethoven have thereby broken the limits of time lines and opened readers’ listening pleasures and perspectives into the future.

And that’s the point of reviews: the future. With perspective on the history of an art form and an awareness of its current state—an awareness developed by the immersive diligence of writing reviews on a wide range of recent events—critics see in new works their implications, their promise, the possibilities that they expand, the vistas that they open. They see it not because they’ve heard the artists’ claims but because they see the art dynamically, even prophetically.

It’s by reviews that critics stay current, by reviews that critics lay the groundwork for essays, videos, podcasts, and other cross-sectional or survey formats. Any cultural journalist can absorb a (no pun intended) critical mass of movies (or plays, concerts, records, etc.), but it’s only by way of extended engagement with each one of them that the essay or discussion can get past chitchat and reflect the substance and the merits of the works at hand. It’s not a matter of critics taking themselves seriously but of taking art seriously. By all means, newspapers and magazines should feature videos (I do them enthusiastically), essays (this is one), festival roundups (which are also reviews), profiles (I’ve done them, too, and find that their prime value is as veiled criticism, as backdoor approaches to the work itself). But all of those things rest on and are nourished by the fundamental critical confrontation with individual works.

In the absence of this, what’s left is the curse and the shrug of the “interesting”—a nonaesthetic approach that puts art before readers as a curiosity, as a set of talking points rather than as a form of personal experience, of devotion, of passion. The heart of the review is emotion, the stirrings of the soul, receptiveness to the life-changing power of art (even commercial art); personality-centered formats rooted in reporting or in talk are art from the ego, more like homework or social capital. And, though criticism is obviously subjective, at another level it is resolutely objective—a form of reporting from within. As idiosyncratic as individual critics may be, they also have fundamental commonalities with readers—and, in expressing, with care and flair, their own feelings, they often awaken such feelings in readers, for whom these emotions had been latent or inchoate. Like any literary work, the individual critical voice finds its echoes in the world at large, in readers’ self-recognition, in a sense of community.

A review by a responsible critic inherently involves introspection, looking into oneself to see whether unnoticed or unquestioned personal factors influence or deform one’s experience of the work at hand. The effort to seize, convey, and deepen one’s personal experience—to expand the two hours at a movie or a concert or a play into one’s own life, to extend that experience through one’s longtime aesthetic passion, and to do so with a sense of style that embodies the excitement and the energy of that experience—makes the review inherently a deeply personal work. Veering away from such essentially literary explorations of art, as the Times seems ready to do, is a disservice to readers and to art itself. In downgrading reviews, publications yield to the temptation of corporatized impersonality, just as much as tightly formatted and studio-governed Hollywood movies do. Arts coverage risks becoming a spectacle unto itself, the creative vitality of individual voices replaced by a smorgasbord of packaged samples. When media companies quiet or subordinate voices that meet art where it happens—that lend it the spark of life on the page, that kindle artistic fervor in readers—a decline in enthusiasm for the arts, and for arts journalism, becomes a self-fulfilling prophecy. ♦

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艺术评论 文化报道 媒体价值 批判性思维 艺术传播
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