Guidebook: A Mozartean Museum
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 10 January 2024
Summary
Voici, mon ami, les idées qui m’ont passé par la tête à la vue des tableaux qu’on a exposés cette année au Salon. Je les jette sur le papier, sans me soucier ni de les trier ni de les écrire. Il y en aura de vraies, il y en aura de fausses. Tantôt vous me trouverez trop sévère, tantôt trop indulgent. Je condamnerai peut-être où vous approuveriez; je ferai grâce où vous condamneriez; vous exigerez encore où je serai content. Peu m’importe.
[Here, my friend, are the ideas that came to me at the sight of the paintings exhibited at this year's Salon. I toss them down on paper without worrying about sorting through them or fleshing them out. Some will be true, others false. You will find me sometimes too harsh, other times too indulgent. I will perhaps criticize where you would approve; I will forgive where you would condemn; you will expect more where I am content. No matter.]
—Diderot to Grimm, Dedication from the Salon de 1761From the opening of Europe's great public galleries—the British Museum in 1750, the Hermitage in 1764, the Uffizi in 1765, and the Louvre in 1793—to Diderot and d’Alembert's Encyclopédie des Sciences, des Arts, et des Métiers, the Enlightenment's instinct to collect, preserve, and make public all forms of knowledge dominated the eighteenth century's cultural productivity. Now, as then, the public space of the museum hosts a systematized eclecticism, one that informs and entertains its visitors, that preserves and disseminates its contents, and that boldly creates a comprehensive experience through singular representative examples. Despite the proliferation of museum culture since the eighteenth century, however, a descriptive series of texts imitating a collection of exhibits in the style of Diderot's intimate and quirky Salons essays has fallen out of style. There are any number of reasons for this, as Diderot flippantly points out: this kind of textual museum is built on curatorial principles that include spontaneity and subjective impressions. The resulting collage is sometimes “false” because hypothetical, likely controversial because biased, and risks putting the author at odds with even his friendliest readers now and then. All this seems too perilous even for today's adventurous theorizing.
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- Opera and the Politics of TragedyA Mozartean Museum, pp. xv - xxxviPublisher: Boydell & BrewerPrint publication year: 2023