Dumb, dumber, dumbest. To think that the USSR will be remembered for its 
portraiture is quite a stretch when so very few of its totalitarian rulers are 
worth remembering, let alone as subjects of art.  The roman portraiture in 
stone is impressive, some of it,  given that so little remains of Greek art, or 
of earlier ancient portraiture but it's scarcely at the peak of art history.
wc  



----- Original Message ----
From: Chris Miller <[email protected]>
To: [email protected]
Sent: Sat, December 5, 2009 9:51:16 AM
Subject: Re: "Hegel gets at this idea when he says that a great portrait  can b 
e more like the individual than the real individual himself. The  pai  nter 
captures the essence, the deeper reality."

Back in the middle decades of the 20th C., portraiture was much more important
in   USSR than USA, so it's not  surprising that Boris associates that
practice  with Truth, while WIlliam thinks of it as just one more meaningless
thing that a painter might choose to do.

And when the Red Terror finally becomes an historical footnote, I'm guessing
that the Evil Empire will be as well known for its remarkable  portrait
sculpture as ancient imperial Rome now is.

And let's not forget that portraiture is practiced in literature as well.

Perhaps there it's easier for modern Americans to accept that the goal of
portraiture is truth, rather than just excellent or  innovative prose

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