You may
have recently heard that Edvard
Munch’s masterpiece “The Scream” sold for a near-record $120 million.
Shortly after, San Francisco Chronicle movie critic Mick LaSalle held a vote on his “Maximum
Strength Mick” blog, asking readers which of 31 Old Master masterpieces would
they like to own if could they afford it.
The selections ranged from the “Mona Lisa” (no no no, not the Bob Hoskins movie . . . aargh!) to Picasso’s “Guernica,” a
painting that would only fit in Mitt Romney’s living room or the brick wall of
the alley you live in, should you happen to be homeless.
I
picked “Starry Night” for its dark turbulence; the stars like
giant blossoms rolling across a turbulent blue sky on streams of energy. You
can see the wind. It’s reality transformed, space seen as swirling with life.
I
entered my selection, “Starry Night” by Vincent Van Gogh. Then, I added teasingly,
“pronounced “Van Goch,” or maybe “Van Gich.”
“Ohhhh,
stop being a show-off,” I’ve been told. Everyone—and
that means E-VERY-ONE—pronounces it “Van Go” and who am I, some big-browed ponce who’s read “Gravity’s
Rainbow” twice, to stand against the customs of lemmings? I’m only showing off
my erudition like Michael Sheen parading his mouthy brain through the Louvre in
“Midnight In Paris,” annoying the innocent-and-down-to-earth Owen Wilsons of
the world (though, Owen's character, it must be said, is every millimeter the snob).
Arguments
like this always give the impression of people looking up their noses at me.
If were
a rude person, I’d be tempted to say a hearty “intercourse yourself” and
continue glottal-stopping my way through the art gallery of life. However, my nose-thumb
at the Indomitable Hive is not the point. My argument is based strictly and
strongly on simple courtesy. Or what I also call the John Wayne Argument: “Ya
call a fella how he likes to be called, pil-grim. Dead or alive.”
The “Van
Go” said nowadays is the French pronunciation, and if Van Gogh were French, he
would have pronounced it that way, too. But Van Gogh wasn’t French. He was born
in the town of Zundert, which, as much as Wikipedia might sometimes have it
otherwise, is not in France, but in the Netherlands.
Van
Gogh was Dutch. He spoke Dutch and would have given his name a Dutch
pronunciation (though, intriguingly, he may have been somewhat mispronouncing
it himself: It’s also seems to be pronounced “Van Gich,” as discussed here.
Exactly
how his name took on French coloration I haven’t found out, but, what’s really
important is that Van Gogh apparently really really did not like the “Van Go” pronunciation. Van Gogh was
already known as a difficult house guest and roommate (“almost unbearable” as even
his loyal and loving brother Theo put it), and misstating his name made him
even a bigger pill.
But
whether Van Gogh was a Minnesota Nice Guy or not, what counts is courtesy. If
you really love Van Gogh—or just love his art—it seems simply rude and tone
deaf to address him any way but the right way--his way--even if he’s tracking
mud all over your carpet while squeezing your last franc out of you and
stealing the cheese off the sideboard.
Call
him whatever else you want, but never call him “Van Go.”
(And if
my argument really bothers you, look at it as one more way for freedom-loving
Americans to annoy freedom-hating French persons.)
For
myself, I imagine my own fierce displeasure at returning from the Beyond 150
years from now to find out that everyone is pronouncing my name “Boorch-veelt”
simply because it took a German academic to make me world famous. Posthumous
fame is nice, but please remember to address my ghost as “Burtch-feeld” (tongue
tip on the hard plate, “f” as in “field”). Or else, I’ll steal your cheese, all your scotch and scare
the feces out of you as I melt away into perfect gloom.
To
extend my argument further--if irrelevantly--consider the case of Vladimir
Putin and George W. Bush (former assistant to former President Richard B. Cheney).
Sadly, we all recall Bush II’s joy in towel snapping nicknames on
whoever happened to be standing around. On Putin, President of the Russian
Federation (and whose soul was visible to Bush II, but no one else), Bush bestowed the
nickname “Pootie-poot.”
Now, I
know nicknames are not the same as given names, but imagine if, somehow,
“President Vladimir Pootie-poot” had gone totally viral and had become customary
usage to everyone in the world (yes, I’m looking at you, Henry Kissinger!) except
for . . . well, a dictator of immense
power whose desk drawer contains a big red button with which he could launch
World War 3.2. Tyrants are never good sports and “But everyone says it like
that” is not a useful, or moral, argument, even in regard to a Vladimir Putin.
I daresay, President Obama and Secretary of State Clinton would be inclined to
agree.
At
least, I hope they are.
Come Holmes
fans come! The game is afoot!
A quick
note encouraging all of you to stop your lives this Sunday night to watch the
second season of “Sherlock!"
on PBS Mystery (check your local listings). I loved the first three
episodes broadcast last year; to my eyes, they blew the dust off without losing
the spirit of the Conan Doyle originals.
The
reviews for this season promise more ripping adventure starring Benedict
Cumberbatch as the 21st-Century Holmes (the best Holmes since Basil
Rathbone, full of bounding energy and infuriating self-regard), Martin Freeman as a sweetly exasperated
but always game Watson, and co-creators Stephen Moffat and Mark Gatiss.
So many
mystery series these days seemed weighted with humorless self-importance (AMC’s
“The Killing” for one) that “Sherlock!” looks as fresh and cheerful as a daisy.
I wouldn’t miss it for the world.
Copyright 2012 by Thomas
Burchfield
Thomas Burchfield has recently completed his 1920s gangster thriller Butchertown. He can be friended on Facebook, followed on Twitter, and read at Goodreads. You can also join his e-mail list via tbdeluxe [at] sbcglobal [dot] net. He lives in Northern California with his wife, Elizabeth.
4 comments:
I'm curious to hear who will win the columnist's vote on 31 masterpieces.
Let us know! My guess is that A Starry Night will be very high on the list. I'm not surprised about the auction value of The Scream-- it is such an icon, even though the version that sold is a pastel drawing and not a painting.
As for the pronunciation of Van Gogh, he spoke and wrote French so well during the last 5 years of his life that he almost seems to have forgotten his native language.
I just can't get that guttural sound of Van "Goch"
Thanks, Julie! I haven't seen any followup on the vote yet. It seems not that many readers participated, nowhere near as many participate in his movie polls. And even though Van Gogh spoke French, I don't think he went that far as to adopt the pronunciation. Pretty ironic how he drew the line.
You're probably right. Anyone not Dutch who can pronounce it the Dutch way is pretty amazing.
(On a note, Van Gogh wrote to Theo in French, and I wonder why...No doubt Theo had to know very good French for his business)
Thanks, Julie! This actually led to a long thread on another discussion group that I hang out on. One of the commenters actually provided a link to a quiz show hosted by Stephen Fry, where it was a question! Go to:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YLTQv8RH1TE
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