Thursday, June 23, 2016

Painting the Rainbow





Caspar David Friedrich, Landscape with Rainbow, 1810






Caspar David Friedrich, Mountain Landscape with a Rainbow, c.1809 - 1810





John Constable, View of London from Hampstead Heath with a Double Rainbow, 1831







John Constable, Double Rainbow, 1812






JMW Turner, Arundel Castle with a Rainbow, c. 1824 - 1825









JMW Turner, The Thames with a Rainbow, c.1812






William Blake, The Death of the Virgin Mary, 1803








William Blake, The Four and Twenty Elders Throw Down Their Crowns Before the Throne
c1803-1805





Noah Frees the Animals from the Ark, 12th century mosaic, Saint Mark's









From the Noah Window, Chartres Cathedral, 13th century






Giotto, The Last Judgement, detail, from the Arena Chapel, Padua, 1304 - 1305







Adriaen van den Venne, Fishing for Souls, 1614









Peter Paul Rubens, Landscape with Rainbow, 1636








Frederick Church, Rainy Season in the Tropics, 1866









Albert Bierstadt, Fallen Stag and Rainbow








George Inness, The Rainbow, 1878 - 1879







George Inness, The Delaware Water Gap, 1866








John Everett Millais, The Blind Girl, 1856








Ford Maddox Brown, Walton on Naze, 1859








Maurice Predergast, Rainbow, 1905









Hans Hofmann, Veluti in Speculum, 1962








Mark Rothko, No. 6 (Violet, Green, and Red), 1951









Morris Louis, Saraband, 1959







Judy Chicago, Rainbow Pickett, 1965




The rainbow is in trouble these days.

A rainbow is a fleeting optical effect; the sunlight broken up into its constituent spectrum colors when shining on falling water or mist, a trifling ephemeral thing.  And yet, like so many trifling ephemeral things, the rainbow is one of those things that makes life worth the bother of living it.  To see one is always a happy thrill and a great good fortune.
The rainbow plays a powerful role in human imagination, usually as a symbol of hope or glory, especially in religious art.

Today, the rainbow plays a different symbolic role; unity in diversity.  Just as sunlight is the sum of all the different colors of the spectrum, so The Just Society, The Beloved Community, is the sum of all of its members and is incomplete if even one is missing.  The rainbow means equality without uniformity.  It means belonging without having to sacrifice identity.  The rainbow in our day is the ultimate cosmopolitan symbol.  That's why the LGBTQ movement made the rainbow its symbol.  We are there in every nation and tribe on earth transcending class, race, nationality, sect, condition, etc.
LGBTQ people are among the primary beneficiaries of a global cosmopolitan culture.

Now that vision of a global cosmopolitan society is under attack.  The global economy benefitted legions of people, but also badly hurt legions more destroying livelihoods and uprooting communities.  Ironically, it is capital that internationalized despite all the calls since 1848 for the workers of the world to unite.  In the upper reaches of international capital, national loyalty is a very quaint thing.  Capital's first loyalty is always to itself.  At the heart of the problem is market capitalism's assumption that everything and everyone is disposable, that the very idea of any intrinsic value apart from use and exchange is meaningless.  We voted for a world divided between winners and losers, between the necessary and the superfluous, and now we reap the whirlwind. Working classes now turn against internationalism and cosmopolitanism toward nationalism, sectarianism, and even racism.  The cold relentless anonymity of modern life, the nihilism and predation at the heart of international market capitalism drives the reactionary fury in religious fundamentalist movements.
Gay folk around the world are under attack as beneficiaries of that cosmopolitanism, as its living embodiments, even if we've suffered the global economy along with everyone else.


Scout Register's vandalized Rainbow Flag from Tomball, Texas



San Francisco artist Gilbert Baker created the rainbow flag in 1978 and assigned very specific meanings to each color.  He originally designed an 8 stripe flag, but printing and dying techniques of the day required that the flag be edited to six stripes arranged as they are in the spectrum and in the rainbow with the red stripe always on top.  That 6 stripe rainbow flag may not be quite what Baker intended, but it is closer to the real rainbow in nature.  As is true with all flags, the rainbow flag acquired meanings and associations through its history, despite whatever the designer originally intended.  Today it stands as the symbol of our community and the unity in diversity that is its nature.  The rainbow that according to the ancient stories God put into the sky as a visible sign of the covenant he made with Noah to never again destroy the earth with a flood, now reminds us that we belong in the world, that we are natural.  The rainbow is a sign in the sky of the Beloved Community that we long for.



















1 comment:

Gerrit said...

"Scout Register reached out to let us know that anti-LGBTQ people reported his original post as "inappropriate" to Facebook, and so after it had been shared more than 10,000 times, Facebook removed it."

You'd expect that Mr.Zuckerberg would stick up a finger to the swastika lovers, but no.

Coward.