Good and Evil, Right and Wrong
Natalia Dashan · March 23, 2018 It’s sad that following the massacre of their classmates, the students of Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School in Florida should immediately turn to government for action instead of to their own communities. The obvious question suggested by these crimes is: What’s wrong with us? Do I know…
President Trump, Day One: A Schedule of Events, Price's Obamacare Conundrum, and Alone Time With Stuart Smalley
Michael Warren · January 20, 2017 Today is Inauguration Day, so it seems fitting to kick things off with the inaugural edition of this new feature here at THE WEEKLY STANDARD. For the first 100 (or so) days of the Donald J. Trump administration, look to this space for inside coverage of our 45th president, his White House, and his…
Abraham Lincoln's Thanksgiving
David Gelernter · November 24, 2016 Four themes flow together at one of the most remarkable points in American history—the evening when Abraham Lincoln for the last time proclaimed a national day of thanksgiving. It was April 11, 1865: two days after the Civil War ended with Robert E. Lee's surrender at Appomattox; four days before…
The Truth About Trump
David Gelernter · May 20, 2016 Many intellectuals misunderstand Donald Trump. Intellectuals often forget that Americans vote for a man, not a white paper, and that Trump passed the very first test for Republican candidates in 2016 while the rest of the field flunked. He was angry and seemed capable of acting on his anger. Trump…
The Elephant in the Room
David Gelernter · February 19, 2016 Donald Trump is succeeding, we're told, because he appeals to angry voters — but that's obvious; tell me more. Why are they angry, and how does he appeal to them? In 2016, Americans want to vote for a person and not a white paper. If you care about America's fate under Obama, naturally you are…
What Explains the Vicious Left?
David Gelernter · December 31, 2015 The asymmetry of modern politics is clear to every conservative; painfully clear to several Yale undergraduates who asked me about it recently. Leftists, they pointed out, are hostile, nasty, and seem to have no concept of a civil conversation. Why? Because they are winning? Losing? Are…
A Life that Made Sense
David Gelernter · September 7, 2015 The difference between man and woman is the force that hauls life forward (as the Talmud remarks) and the origin of everything that is most beautiful in our world. I thought I understood that, but I didn’t until my father died. The whole can transcend the sum of parts, and that’s why Judaism deems…
Hidden in Plain Sight
David Gelernter · March 9, 2015 President Obama has ignored the recent history of U.S. foreign policy, faithfully repeating failed strategies and turning his back on successes. The pattern is so strange and striking, we can almost hear it trying to tell us something. The something is this: You cannot be a nationalist and a…
The War on Truth
David Gelernter · February 24, 2014 News from academia! “President Salovey and I,” writes Yale’s provost, “have invited a distinguished group of academic leaders to a diversity summit at Yale on February 11-12, 2014. Their visit will include a series of discussions with faculty and administrators about the challenges of diversifying…
Back to School
David Gelernter · September 30, 2013 This school-reopening season ought to be a time of deep pondering and self-examination for conservatives and everyone else who cares about the future of this nation and the world. It’s time to notice how little we have done about the most powerful, dangerous, reactionary force in America today: the…
Better with Age
David Gelernter · March 4, 2013 ‘Matisse: In Search of True Painting” is a smallish but superb show at the Metropolitan Museum of Art. It focuses on pairs and series of related paintings, and the sheer loveliness of its best pieces resounds through the huge building and out onto Fifth Avenue. But it is sad that this small-scale,…
A Master’s Voice
David Gelernter · September 10, 2012 The Serpent and the Lamb is not easy to pin down. Officially, it tells the story of Martin Luther’s relations with the eminent painter Lucas Cranach the Elder (1472-1553); Professor Ozment argues that the two men created the Protestant Reformation between them. Luther was the mastermind and…
Moebius Strip
David Gelernter · April 19, 2012 The future of Iran’s nuclear weapons program depends on one of those strange alignments of justice and personal gain that create eclipses and flood tides when planetary bodies are the actors. It’s important that the world understand these strange circumstances.
Back Off,Madam!
David Gelernter · April 13, 2012 I, and every conservative I know, have been eagerly polite, warmly encouraging to women who chose to work—from the very beginning, from the 1970s or ‘80s, when working women first changed the national landscape.
Out of the Closet
David Gelernter · January 30, 2012 New York’s art museums are shirking two crucial civic duties. One is to show major artworks, not just buy them. The other is to serve the community in which they live. Museums in other American cities often do the same, but New York is different: It is still (for the time being) the center of the…
Terrorism Is the Crime Without a Cause
David Gelernter · August 19, 2011 Since word came of the terrorist murder and mayhem in the Negev, I haven't been able to get out of my head an old Israeli dance song about setting out for the desert. There has been (Lord knows) plenty of blood shed in the Negev since this long-ago song was first sung, but the first generation LP…
Be Clear!
David Gelernter · June 20, 2011 Obamacrats think their man is in trouble because (as usual) he’s got “communication problems.” He seems to suffer from these all the time, which is odd given that he was elected mainly because of his flair for communicating; given that the queen of England is still, no doubt, enjoying the audio…
Elites Gone Bad
David Gelernter · June 13, 2011 Although it’s gauche to ask, one can’t help wondering: Do the Obamacrats love America? If so, how come? Would they please be specific?
The Flip Side
David Gelernter · April 18, 2011 Ilana Lewitan is a painter of questions too wide or deep for words, whose originality, intelligence, and painterly virtuosity make her one of the most significant surrealists in decades. Her work is now on show at the prestigious Galerie Noah in Augsburg. Possibly you weren’t planning to stop by…
Abstract Illuminations
David Gelernter · April 10, 2011 Makoto Fujimura is one of the best painters alive; there is no finer abstract painter at work today. He is a Christian who lives in New York and paints using the traditional Japanese Nihonga technique, and Crossway has just published an elegantly produced folio of the four gospels with Fujimura’s…
Singer of Zion
David Gelernter · September 27, 2010 Yehuda Halevi
Dead in the Water
David Gelernter · August 9, 2010 Martin Amis’s most recent novel told a story about the summer of 1970 from a modern standpoint. Strange fact: The Pregnant Widow revealed, without exactly meaning to, that cultural attitudes have gone virtually nowhere in the last 40 years.
Acrylic Lyricist
David Gelernter · May 24, 2010 The eminent abstract painter Robert Natkin died on April 20 in Danbury, Connecticut, aged 79. The Metropolitan, Guggenheim, Whitney, and Museum of Modern Art in New York and the Hirschhorn in Washington all own Natkin paintings. In one sense, he was a magnificent survival of the New York School of…
See No Evil
Daniel Pipes is one of several commentators to note that many reporters would love to dismiss each new terrorist incident as the work of lunatics, until the disappointing news arrives that the suspect is yet another Muslim Jihadist. Several observations leap to their feet immediately, and there is…
Master in Depth
David Gelernter · February 15, 2010 In a small but magisterial show that stopped in Paris and then (late last year) at the Dillon Gallery in Manhattan, Makoto Fujimura emerged as a major artist, one of the dozen-odd most compelling painters at work today. Fujimura is a Christian who paints within the Nihonga tradition of a limited…
Darwin Turns 200
David Gelernter · December 28, 2009 Charles Darwin
The Gothic Vision
David Gelernter · February 2, 2009 We see better when we recognize and can name (at least for our own purposes) the things we see. If you can tell a delphinium from a daylily, or a Titian from a Rubens, or a Honda Civic from a Lotus Elise, you see the world in sharper focus than someone who can't.
Facing Reality
David Gelernter · January 19, 2009 Several smart observers have described the root cause of the ongoing battle between Israel and Hamas in the exact same phrase: "irreconcilable differences." America and Europe are warned not to press for pointless negotiations, because the parties are irreconcilable. Israel and the Palestinians…
'Clean Hands and a Pure Heart'
David Gelernter · November 3, 2008 Americans have traditionally rated their statesmen's moral stature above all other accomplishments. "The truth is," says a foreigner to a Frenchman in Stendhal's classic of 1830 Le Rouge et le Noir, "that your aged society values conventionality above everything; you will never rise higher than…
Simple Truths
David Gelernter · October 6, 2008 McCain might break through the media fortress that protects independents from the truth if he'd repeat a small packet of information word-for-word at the end of every single speech. Soon crowds would anticipate these words and reporters would know them by heart, and they'd start making an…
What McCain Needs to Say
David Gelernter · October 6, 2008 McCain might break through the media fortress that protects independents from the truth if he'd repeat a small packet of information word-for-word at the end of every single speech. Soon crowds would anticipate these words and reporters would know them by heart, and they'd start making an…
Obama in Leftland
David Gelernter · October 6, 2008 Barack Obama is America's first major party presidential candidate to have come of age after the Cultural Revolution of the late 1960s and '70s. Americans who reached adulthood before or during the Cultural Revolution often differ over the big events of recent history. Americans who came of age…
Feminism and the English Language
David Gelernter · March 3, 2008 How can I teach my students to write decently when the English language has become a wholly-owned subsidiary of the Academic-Industrial Complex? Our language used to belong to all its speakers and readers and writers. But in the 1970s and '80s, arrogant ideologues began recasting English into heavy…
Beyond Betar
David Gelernter · December 24, 2007 Jews and Power
Instant Sex
David Gelernter · December 17, 2007 A middle school in Portland, Maine, decided recently that it would hand out birth-control pills to girls as young as 11; no parental consent required. Strippers were invited to participate (fully clothed) in this year's "Haunted Halloween Carnival Benefit" at a New York City middle school.…
Captain Hornblower
David Gelernter · November 26, 2007 The Norman Invasion was the talk of New York in the late 1950s and early '60s. Norman Podhoretz gave the definitive brief account of his co-Norman's character and personality in Ex-Friends; and it wasn't pretty. But it's fair to point out, nonetheless, that Mailer transformed himself by sheer force…
Defeat at Any Price
David Gelernter · September 24, 2007 To prepare for General David Petraeus's long-awaited testimony on Iraq to Congress last week, the liberal pressure group MoveOn.org wrote itself into the history books with an anti-Petraeus ad so repulsive it ranked with Lyndon Johnson's infamous 1964 TV spot in the campaign against Barry…
A World Without Public Schools
David Gelernter · June 4, 2007 Should America have public schools, or would we do better without them? Nothing is more important to this country than the transformation of children into educated American citizens. That's what public schools are for, and no institutions are better suited to the role--in principle. They used to…
How Odd of God . . .
David Gelernter · April 30, 2007 Jews and Gentiles
Ramping Up the Violence
David Gelernter · February 26, 2007 Israeli government authorities are building a ramp to allow non-Muslims to reach the enormous platform atop the Temple Mount in Jerusalem. The old access ramp was condemned as unsafe and torn down several years ago. The interim ramp that replaced it was designed for short-term service only.…
Please Say This . . .
David Gelernter · January 22, 2007 "I have spelled out good reasons for Americans to be impatient with our war in Iraq, good reasons for us to ask more of our Iraqi allies, good reasons to change our own plans. We must fight this war the best and smartest way we can. But realism is a two-way street. So now let me tell you why I am…
Thus All Too Seldom to Tyrants
David Gelernter · January 15, 2007 "Rejoice not when thy enemy falleth"--that is the Bible's advice (Proverbs 24:17), and the classical rabbinic tradition cites this verse in urging us never to celebrate the death of an enemy no matter how evil. But Americans have plenty to celebrate in the trial and punishment of Saddam Hussein by…
Call It Murder
David Gelernter · August 14, 2006 PAMELA WAECHTER was murdered at the Jewish Federation of Greater Seattle on Friday, July 28--an American who was born a Lutheran and reared in Minneapolis, a middle-aged mother, a convert to Judaism who became a leader in Seattle's Jewish community. Pamela Waechter. Do not stamp her "hate crime"…
When Will They Ever Learn...
David Gelernter · July 31, 2006 FOR YEARS I have watched the Palestinians do absurdly self-destructive things, and have never understood them until now. But watching the Bush administration stoutly defend Israel this week against the background of an American Jewish population that vocally (often sneeringly) dislikes him and his…
The Art of Thinking
David Gelernter · June 5, 2006 The Moral Imagination
No More Vietnams
NOT LONG AGO RICHARD COHEN of the Washington Post wrote a column about Iraq headlined "As in Vietnam, dereliction of duty all over again." The Vietnam analogy has been part of the Iraq war story since the fighting started (in fact, since before it started). The Bush administration often deals with…
Back to Federalism
David Gelernter · April 10, 2006 FEBRUARY'S COMMENTARY has one of the most frightening essays of recent years, in which James Q. Wilson makes the case that Americans are polarized to an unprecedented extent; bitterly divided. Responsible conservatives should confront this problem and show the country how to solve it. Not to solve…
Ownership Society
David Gelernter · March 20, 2006 SOMETIMES WORDS TELL THE TRUTH on purpose; sometimes they give it away by accident. Both things happened last week in mid-Palo Alto, down the road from Stanford University, ground zero of Silicon Valley--where pale pink plum-blossoms bloom in February and Ferraris are as common as Pontiacs in…
Misinformation Age
David Gelernter · January 2, 2006 We are supposed to be living in the "Information Age." If we are, exactly what topic are people so well--informed about? Video games? The same experts who know for sure that we are in mid--Information Age take it for granted that young people are colossally uninformed. And young people are more…
Abraham Lincoln's Thanksgiving
David Gelernter · November 28, 2005 FOUR THEMES FLOW TOGETHER AT one of the most remarkable points in American history--the evening when Abraham Lincoln for the last time proclaimed a national day of thanksgiving. It was April 11, 1865: two days after the Civil War ended with Robert E. Lee's surrender at Appomattox; four days before…
Passion in Abstract
David Gelernter · October 10, 2005 ROBERT NATKIN IS A PAST master of American painting, a national treasure in his mid-seventies who is still inventing new ways to paint while enjoying his position at the pinnacle.
Bible Illiteracy in America
David Gelernter · May 23, 2005 A REPORT JUST ISSUED BY the Bible Literacy Project (more on this later) suggests that young Americans know very little about the Bible. The report is important, but first things first: A fair number of Americans don't see why teenagers should know anything at all about the Bible.
A Faithful Art
David Gelernter · March 7, 2005 MAKOTO FUJIMURA'S PAINTINGS ARE A joyful gusher from a well that had long run dry--or so the world assumed. Abstract expressionism has yielded little that is new in recent years. Granted, some distinguished abstract painters who made their mark in the 1950s and 1960s continued to paint in the new…
The Inventor of Modern Conservatism
David Gelernter · February 7, 2005 BENJAMIN DISRAELI--TWICE PRIME minister of Great Britain, romantic novelist, inventor of modern conservatism--was a neocon in the plain sense of the word, a "new conservative" who began his career on the left. Conservative thinking dates to the dawn of organized society, but modern conservatism--a…
Sometimes a Great Speech
David Gelernter · January 31, 2005 GEORGE W. BUSH IS a strong, clear-minded president--one of the strongest and clearest-minded we have ever had. Why can't a great president give a great speech?
Truman Beats Dewey! Again!!
David Gelernter · November 15, 2004 ON ELECTION DAY, Establishment big shots were certain that America wanted change and that the suave, sophisticated challenger had to beat the blunt, plain, downright embarrassing incumbent. All day long they were certain. At midnight the famous radio commentator H.V. Kaltenborn summed up the…
Bush's Greatness
David Gelernter · September 13, 2004 IT'S OBVIOUS not only that George W. Bush has already earned his Great President badge (which might even outrank the Silver Star) but that much of the opposition to Bush has a remarkable and very special quality; one might be tempted to call it "lunacy." But that's too easy. The "special quality"…
What Ronald Reagan Understood
David Gelernter · June 21, 2004 FOLLOWING the long-ago apocalypse of World War I, the world seemed like a shellshocked battle-casualty remolded by surgeons into something new and terrible. For generations afterward, into the Second World War and out the other side, most people were afraid to look; nearly everyone was scared to…
It's America's War
David Gelernter · May 24, 2004 THESE ARE TIMES when President Bush and Defense Secretary Rumsfeld could probably use some encouragement. They should ponder a short note by Anthony Eden to Winston Churchill. It was May 1941 and World War II was going badly. Churchill was Britain's Bush and Rumsfeld, prime minister and minister of…
The Holocaust Shrug
David Gelernter · April 5, 2004 I HEAR AND READ ALL THE TIME about Democratic fury; evidently, enraged Democrats are prepared to do whatever it takes to rid the country of George W. Bush's foul presence. Somehow Republican rage doesn't seem quite as newsworthy (and when it does show up, the storyline is usually "Republicans Angry…
Don't Quit as We Did in Vietnam
David Gelernter · November 11, 2003 U.S. POLICY IN IRAQ is haunted by Vietnam, no question about that. That's why Americans support the war and will keep on supporting it until we win. ("Win" is a verb you rarely heard in the Vietnam era.) We are haunted by the image of Vietnamese who trusted and supported us trying frantically to…
Onward, Christian Soldier!
David Gelernter · November 3, 2003 LIEUTENANT GENERAL William Boykin, deputy undersecretary of defense for intelligence and a highly decorated officer, has intimated that the United States is a Christian country and that he is, himself, a Christian. Journalists across the nation are shocked and horrified. Apparently the general has…
Bush's Rhetoric Deficit
David Gelernter · October 6, 2003 ON IRAQ the administration likes to talk interest, not duty. "We did ourselves and the world a favor." But interest is always arguable; duty can be absolutely clear. Torture, mass murder, and hellish tyranny make for the clearest case possible. Yet too often the administration has sounded hesitant…
Apres Spam
David Gelernter · September 29, 2003 EMAIL is a slippery medium. For example: Is it good or bad for the art of writing? Both. It devalues the written word; email is so fast and easy to send, correspondents exchange semi-articulate gibberings without a second thought. There used to be good letter writers, but there don't seem to be any…
The Next Great American Newspaper
David Gelernter · June 23, 2003 ROUGHLY SIX YEARS AGO I gave a talk at a D.C. think tank complaining that it was outrageous for the conservative community (that vigorous, virile young beast) to allow New York City to subsist on the thin gruel of the New York Times Book Review and the New York Review of Books, both left of center.…
Why Fascists Fight
David Gelernter · April 14, 2003 "YOUR COUNTRY sinks beneath Jewish-Anglo-American bombs. Your parents lie amid the ruins. Come avenge them." That might be a quote from the Iraqi information minister; it comes in fact from a leaflet printed by the SS and discovered in liberated Cologne, March 1945. The similarities between Iraq on…
Wrong Answer
David Gelernter · March 24, 2003 A RUMSFELD ANSWER at a press conference revealed an easy-to-fix yet important problem with the administration's view of the war.
Replacing the United Nations
David Gelernter · March 17, 2003 IF IT WERE WORKING PROPERLY, a world organization like the United Nations could offer the United States official sanction for an upcoming bout, and assure the world that the heavyweight champion (no matter what kind of lowlife he is up against) will play by the rules and rein himself in; will hit…
Why Are We in Space?
David Gelernter · February 4, 2003 RETURN TO THE END of the Gulf War, when we did not go to Baghdad. The wave was taking us there, but we stepped off. To go on would have offended our coalition partners, and contradicted our original plans. So we stopped short. Stepped off history's rolling breaker. Have regretted it ever since.
GWB & JFK
David Gelernter · February 3, 2003 MANY PEOPLE HAVE NOTICED similarities between our dealings with Iraq today and with Cuba during the 1962 missile crisis. Castro and Saddam are volatile, dangerous tyrants we had hoped the locals would get rid of, with some help from their friends. But it didn't work out that way; the Bay of Pigs…
A New Synagogue in the Old City
David Gelernter · October 7, 2002 ARCHITECTURE is politics by other means--at least some of the time. An emerging architectural story in Jerusalem is, in part, wonderful news; in part, a tragic missed opportunity. Recently the Jerusalem Post ran a story on a project that is bound to attract plenty of attention before long: the…
The Roots of European Appeasement
David Gelernter · September 23, 2002 ON NOVEMBER 11, 1920, there was a strange and moving scene in London. The king and his entourage unveiled the Cenotaph in Whitehall and laid solemnly to rest, in Westminster Abbey, an unknown soldier of the Great War. The ceremony had been carefully planned. The whole nation came to a transfixed…
No Trophies for Terrorists
David Gelernter · August 12, 2002 AT SOME POINT ISRAELIS are likely to start asking themselves: Why should we continue to let TV reporters and news photographers take pictures of terrorist murder scenes? Of dead and maimed Israelis, shocked bystanders, grieving families, blood in the streets? Who gave TV cameras the right to be…
On the Jewish Question
David Gelernter · June 10, 2002 THE STATEMENTS BELOW of Goering, Ribbentrop, Rosenberg, Frank, Frick, Hoess, Shirach, Sauckel, and Streicher in and out of court during the Nuremberg War Crimes Trial are quoted verbatim from G.M. Gilbert, "Nuremberg Diary," 1947. Goering was Reich marshal. Ribbentrop was foreign minister.…
A Nation Like Ours
David Gelernter · May 20, 2002 A PHILOSOPHER'S JOB is to show you what you would otherwise miss because it is right in front of your nose, too close to focus on. In one of Mel Brooks's worst, funniest movies, he played a "stand-up philosopher," and we could use some stand-up philosophy right now. Have you ever wondered (a…
A Nation Like Ours
David Gelernter · May 10, 2002 A PHILOSOPHER'S JOB is to show you what you would otherwise miss because it is right in front of your nose, too close to focus on. In one of Mel Brooks's worst, funniest movies, he played a "stand-up philosopher," and we could use some stand-up philosophy right now. Have you ever wondered (a…
Europe to Israel--Drop Dead
David Gelernter · April 22, 2002 ISRAEL IS IN BIG TROUBLE with nearly the whole enlightened world--European "peace activists" and Arab diplomats and Zbigniew Brzezinski and all sorts of mainstream American journalists--for not allowing Palestinian terrorists to kill its citizens with impunity. The Europeans rushed to the West Bank…
The Suicide of the Palestinians
David Gelernter · March 25, 2002 WE OUGHT TO FACE squarely the origins of the Palestinian descent into barbarism. In July 2000, Israeli prime minister Ehud Barak made a peace offer that stunned Israel and the world: Israel would re-divide Jerusalem--would turn over large pieces of its ancient capital to the same people who had…
The Suicide of the Palestinians
David Gelernter · March 16, 2002 WE OUGHT TO FACE squarely the origins of the Palestinian descent into barbarism. In July 2000, Israeli prime minister Ehud Barak made a peace offer that stunned Israel and the world: Israel would re-divide Jerusalem--would turn over large pieces of its ancient capital to the same people who had…
Mysterious Balthus
Well into his forties he was largely unknown, but by the time he died -- this year, on February 18, at age ninety-two -- Balthasar Klossowski was the most celebrated artist in the world. He called himself "Balthus," a frenchified version of a childhood nickname. His parents were Poles (his mother a…
Salter Flies Again
David Gelernter · February 5, 2001 James Salter's novel Cassada tells a story that rushes toward you with the cool hellishness of a treetopskimming jet fighter, then fills the sky overhead and is gone, leaving an unforgettable rustle of thunder uncoiling behind. It is a brilliant novel that in some ways resembles The Great Gatsby: a…
Radio Time Capsule
David Gelernter · November 20, 2000 America Before T.V.
Portrait of the Artist
David Gelernter · December 27, 1999 Rembrandt's Eyes
AIN'T NO SUCH THING AS A FOX
David Gelernter · August 2, 1999 Isaiah Berlin's "The Hedgehog and the Fox" is one of this century's most famous essays -- a virtuoso performance in which Berlin lays down his convenient distinction between two basic intellectual personalities, foxes and hedgehogs. Berlin's main topic is Tolstoy's historical thinking in light of…
WOMEN AND SCIENCE AT YALE
David Gelernter · June 21, 1999 AFFIRMATIVE ACTION seems to be entering a new phase: As the public turns against it, universities are growing increasingly desperate in their support. I teach at Yale, where the administration has made it clear that (in particular) it wants more female professors in technology and the hard…
MEN AT WAR AND THE PLANES THEY LOVED
It's past time to consider America's Second World War fighting airplanes as a body of artwork -- one of the most remarkable the world has ever seen. As artworks they are arresting and the best are gorgeous, and they have the overwhelming importance, here and now, of Banquo's ghost. They represent…
The Defensive Press
David Gelernter · February 22, 1999 In light of the conclusion of the Senate trial of the president, the editors of THE WEEKLY STANDARD asked 22 writers, thinkers, and political actors the following questions: "President William Jefferson Clinton has been impeached and acquitted. What have we learned? What should we do now?"
GET YOUR ALIENATION HERE!
David Gelernter · January 4, 1999 I spend part of my time in the art world and part sulking among technologists. The technology world has loads of energy but not enough ideas. The art world has ideas but not enough energy. The "conservative" art world is especially energy-deprived -- the community that believes in the spiritual…
PICTURING JACKSON POLLOCK
David Gelernter · November 23, 1998 Yellow is the cruelest color. Seemingly extroverted and gay, it expects to be treated like a prima donna, or it will go to pieces. It is too easily corrupted. The barest touch of black or graphite turns it dirty, grudging green. The eye can distinguish a million bright reds, greens, and purples,…
THE FUTURE OF ART
David Gelernter · August 10, 1998 Where does art stand today? Where is it headed? The art world is dark and stormy, visibility is zero, and apocalyptic predictions split the air. Most thoughtful people have barred the door against contemporary art in hopes it will blow over -- which is understandable.
THE FUTURE OF ART
David Gelernter · August 10, 1998 Where does art stand today? Where is it headed? The art world is dark and stormy, visibility is zero, and apocalyptic predictions split the air. Most thoughtful people have barred the door against contemporary art in hopes it will blow over -- which is understandable.
THE JEW AS ARTIST
David Gelernter · July 20, 1998 Any man who has the capacity to make art also has the capacity to destroy it, and Chaim Soutine (1893-1943) was a master-artist of destruction. Successful artists are usually high-pressure, steam-driven personalities. When such people get angry at their work, they hit hard. Thus Michelangelo…
TITIAN'S WOMEN
David Gelernter · May 18, 1998 For sheer dazzling gorgeousness, precious few man-made objects hold their own against the paintings of Titian, the long-lived and enormously productive sixteenth-century Venetian, creator of the celebrates Assunta, the Baccus and Ariadne, the Venus of Urbino, and dozens of other masterpieces. The…
UNRESOLVED EVIL
David Gelernter · April 6, 1998 There never were any group meetings among us targets of the so-called Unabomber, but we nearly had one in Sacramento on the day the trial began. The FBI had set up a "witness room" where we could gather and get briefed, away from the press. Most of the survivors were on hand, together with other…
THE ART OF THE TALK SHOW
David Gelernter · December 8, 1997 A local synagogue held a big shindig recently, and I realized in the course of it that talk-show hosting is America's number one performance art.
DRIVE, BELLOW SAID
David Gelernter · June 16, 1997 Saul Bellow
HUGHES YOU CAN USE
David Gelernter · June 9, 1997 Robert Hughes of Time magazine, most celebrated art critic of the age, has made an irritating, interesting TV series called American Visions that is now showing on PBS. Eight hour-long segments cover the history of American art from colonial times to the present. The close of the last episode finds…
ISN'T IT IRONIC?
David Gelernter · April 21, 1997 Toward the end of March a couple of mourning doves joined the crowd of winter birds eating seed on our back deck, and we knew it was spring. Mourning doves are like robins: They can survive the cold weather without going south, but you don't ordinarily see them around our Connecticut suburb during…
DOROTHY LAMOUR
David Gelernter · November 18, 1996 A perfect fact to remember us by, we "post-moderns" or whatever we are: When we say that entertainment is "adult," we mean it is infantile. The pictorial spelling-out of exactly what happens when a couple goes to bed is in the "Billy learns how to tie his shoes" spirit of edifying books for…
LESS SURFING, MORE LEARNING
David Gelernter · November 4, 1996 MAKING IT POSSIBLE FOR EVERY 12-year-old to "log on to the Internet" is one of President Clinton's main goals for the schools. The Democrats would be foolish to waste this occasion for another helpful, informative TV ad, so here is a suggested script:
Skyscraper Lust
David Gelernter · September 30, 1996 YOU WILL BE shocked to learn that architecture critic Paul Goldberger of the New York Times does not believe New York City ought to pine for its long-lost world's-tallest-building title. But it's lucky the Empire State Building wasn't constructed the way his argument is, or it would have collapsed…
WHAT IS CONSERVATIVE ART?
David Gelernter · September 23, 1996 Several months ago, in an article for THE WEEKLY STANDARD called "The Radware: A Not-All-That-Modest Proposal," I suggested that conservatives should stop complaining about culture and do something about it: should create new institutions, starting with a museum. The museum's curators would dazzle…
HARD TIMES FOR HISTORY
David Gelernter · September 16, 1996 James Patterson's Grand Expectations is intriguing not as a work of history so much as a piece of history. It is the 1945-1974 volume of Oxford's History of the United States (829 pages, $ 35), and it reveals (like shale to a paleontologist) a tremendous lot about the world in which it was made. At…
PICASSO
David Gelernter · August 5, 1996 By the late 1940s Pablo Picasso was convinced he could turn lead into gold, and he was right: He bought things (houses included) with pictures instead of money, and people fought over his merest tablecloth doodle. His transformation into history's only successful alchemist had an amazing effect. He…
NEW YORK, TIME AND AGAIN
David Gelernter · July 1, 1996 The six "Ashcan" artists painted New York City with headlong ardor and limited subtlety starting around the turn of the century; George Bellows, Robert Henri, and John Sloan are the big names. They petered out gradually in the wake of the 1913 Armory show, which introduced Americans to the Fauves…
NEW YORK, TIME AND AGAIN
David Gelernter · July 1, 1996 The six "Ashcan" artists painted New York City with headlong ardor and limited subtlety starting around the turn of the century; George Bellows, Robert Henri, and John Sloan are the big names. They petered out gradually in the wake of the 1913 Armory show, which introduced Americans to the Fauves…
THE RADWARE
David Gelernter · May 20, 1996 American culture is collapsing, and it is the Right's fault. The Left is out there fighting and we are not; the Left operates the institutions that deliver culture to the public. The New York Times and the Smithsonian take their cases to the people. We talk only to each other. If we had any guts…
WIN SLOW HOMER AND OUR CONTEMPORARIES
David Gelernter · March 11, 1996 The most moving objects in the current exhibition of Winslow Homer's work are not the paintings at all, but a pair of banged-up paint boxes in a display case. They seem to have soaked up considerable love. Homer never succeeded in getting a wife, though apparently he was in love at least once.…