Editorial
Quietly
The sound of snow
Dropping on my coat
(Haiku)
About 220 years after Jacques-Louis David
painted the French revolutionist Jean-Paul Marat dead in the bath, stabbed in
his chest (La Mort de Marat, 1793),
the Chinese artist Yue Minjun returned to the
neoclassical masterpiece and repainted the scene, this time without the image
and head of the dead (The Death of Marat,
2002). Thus while David’s work brings to mind representations
of dead Jesus (for example, the first Pietà by Michelangelo or The Entombment of Christ by Caravaggio),
it is hard to escape the comparison with Yue’s work and the depiction of the
empty tomb in which Jesus’ resurrection took place. Either way, these
allusions to Christian faith and art create a statement that ties the willingness
to sacrifice oneself in the name of ideology and a belief in the ability of the
individual to free humanity of its sins and to hasten salvation. If the silence
of the dead in David’s work was deafening, its absence from Yue’s work is even
more deafening. The connection between silence and absence is derived from the
assumption that image can cry out silences (as in the case of the original
painting), as it can create a tumult that originates in the visual nothingness (as
in the case of the new painting that is based on the assumption that the viewer
identifies the exclusion). The common denominator of the silence of the unheard
and the silence of the unseen can be found in the comprehension that we are
dealing with a forceful action, which is a result of a collaboration of the
silenced and silencers, the subjects of the work, its creators, and sometimes
its viewers. One can draw lines of resemblance between two revolutionaries from
different nationality, time, space and culture, that were
silenced by the political system, either with a knife or with censorship and concealment.
The fact that the text, that was written by Marat and can be read in the
painting since the eighteenth-century, became unreadable in a
twenty-first-century painting, contributes as well to the discourse about
silence and silencing.
Silence and silencing in their varied cultural contexts
are at the center of the current issue of the e-journal History and Theory: The Protocols, that is based on the conference
under the title Quiet Please! On Silence and Acts of Silencing
that took place in Bezalel Academy on December 2012. Silence
is an integral part of any spoken language, as the space between words is an
integral part of any written language. People who underwent psychological therapy
are aware of the fact that what was silenced in their childhood has sometimes more
influence on their adulthood than what was spoken. Those who experienced meditation
workshops are acquainted with the great power of silence. In the Israeli
collective memory moments of national silence have become protagonists of the
collective narrative. At times, silence is expressed in the empty space and the
interval between elements in a visual or musical work. John Cage’s 4:33 that opened the conference serves
as a great example of such expression. On this work Cage said that “this is my
favorite work, I listen to it every day”. Therefore, silences are an essential
component in psychoanalysis, conjugal and intergenerational dynamics and in
socialization and creation processes. Silence can constitute a choice of the “speaker”
who wishes “to say” something through it. Undoubtedly, silence can express
power and create experiences of violence, alienation and distance. This is the
nature of deafening silence. At the same time, silence has a quality of
intimacy, something that brings people closer. Sometimes the reaction to it on
behalf of the “listener” is intuitive, and sometimes it requires prior
knowledge in order to identify the silence and interpret the message that it
enfolds. On the other hand, silencing can constitute a forceful action that is forced
on an individual or a group by virtue of social conventions, social discourse
and political control. World history is saturated
with acts of silencing, beginning with censorship on those who try to say or
create something that is not in line with the general or formal stance, and
continuing with the destruction and physical concealment of existing products.
This issue deals with the different aspects of the
contemporary discourse about silence and silencing, and examines complex issues
and dynamics in the fields of art, film, visual culture, literature and music,
history, politics and religions, sociology and psychology. A special place in
the conference and in this issue is dedicated to the ways in which these
concepts, which are derived from speech and hearing, are represented in the
field of visual culture. The articles in this issue are divided into two parts:
Silence (Michal Efratt, Yochai
Ataria, Ayelet Bechar, Sonia Mazar, and Yehuda Israely) and Silencing (Ilan Abekassis, Yehudit Kol-Inbar, Oded Heilbronner, Roni Amir and Dina Azrieli, Nissim Avissar, Efrat Even Tzur, Gidi Yehoshua
and Noga Stiassny).