Tuesday, August 26, 2014

What Is Art: A Look in to Popular Culture of Mona Lisa Smile

"What is art?  What makes it good or bad?  And who decides?" (Schiff, Schindler, Goldsmith-Thomas & Newell, 2003) Professor Katherine Watson asks of her students in "Mona Lisa Smile." What Professor Watson is doing is having her students define a movement in popular culture of the time.  The movie "Mona Lisa Smile" uses art to depict high culture in this time, as the girls of the fictional college, Wellseley, are members of an elitist society made up of all white families, which separates them from their professor, as she is considered of low-culture because of her marital status as much as her upbringing and breeding.  With the use of such things as advertisements and paint by numbers art sets, Professor Watson explains to the audience not only how popular culture shifts and moves but how it compares to high culture, which is a similar motif in many other films, such as "Titanic."  Ultimately, this film is a good example of how high culture and popular culture differ as well as come together.
First, the story of "Mona Lisa Smile" moves in a linear pattern, flowing in a sequential order; however, it does start at the end, with a reformed student, Betty Warren, writing an editorial about her now favorite professor, Ms. Watson.  As Betty narrates, the movie opens with Professor Watson as she rides a train towards Wellseley, on her way to her first job as an arts history teacher.  It does not use flashbacks, only offers backstory through the gossiping and later questioning of their professor. The audience learns that Professor Watson is in fact, an unmarried woman with low breeding, but Betty states, "It was whispered that Katherine Watson, a first year teacher from Oakland State, made up in brains what she lacked in pedigree" (Schiff, Schindler, Goldsmith-Thomas & Newell, 2003).  Professor Watson, having gone to school, and presumably grown up in a liberal state, moves to one of the most conservative states in the United States, and has to adjust to their standards and way of life.  She is called "subversive," which, in that place, is considered a profound insult. 
Professor Watson is depicted as a woman way ahead of her time.  She says in the movie, in response to an editorial written by Betty, "I didn't realize that by demanding excellence I would be challenging . . . the roles you were born to fill" (Schiff, Schindler, Goldsmith-Thomas & Newell, 2003).  Enraged, she confides in another professor and further states, "A finishing school disguised as a college . . . I thought that I was heading to a place that would turn out tomorrow's leaders, not their wives" (Schiff, Schindler, Goldsmith-Thomas & Newell, 2003).  Professor Watson has a difficult time adjusting to this conservative way of life.  In the end though, she does have a profound effect on the girls in her class, except maybe not the way she'd intended. They do not go off to become the leaders of tomorrow, but instead think about the world around them in a different way. 
Secondly, the theme of popular culture in this movie is shown through the art that appears all throughout.  The first piece of art shown is actually an advertisement for Camel Cigarettes.  The ad reads, "When your courses are set, and a real dream boat you've met . . . have a real cigarette!" (Schiff, Schindler, Goldsmith-Thomas & Newell, 2003).  The ad reads as though enjoying a cigarette is synonymous with good grades and love, every woman's "desire."  This is a reflection of the culture that would read the paper or magazine this advertisement is featured in.  It is not just high culture advertising though, it would be considered popular culture, and according to John Storey in Cultural Theory and Popular Cutlure: An Introduction (2009), advertising is considered the main reason of cultural decline by Leavis (p. 24).  Advertising itself is the reason for the lessening of culture and the standard way of living according to Leavis (Storey, 2009, p. 24).  In reading and agreeing with the advertisements of the day, ladies of Wellesley are debasing themselves to a lower culture then they were born into.
 Then, Professor Watson explains to her students about Vincent Van Gogh, "With the ability to reproduce art, it is available to the masses.  No one needs to own a Van Gogh original . . . they can paint their own: Van Gogh in a box ladies, the newest form of mass distributed art, paint by numbers" (Schiff, Schindler, Goldsmith-Thomas & Newell, 2003).  In the 1950s, paint by numbers were all the rage, bringing high culture art to low culture individuals.  Van Gogh, a painter who is considered to be fine art, is now produced for the masses, transforming it to popular culture.  Van Gogh is no longer high culture for the elite to enjoy, but part of popular culture for everyone to enjoy. "Ironic, isn't it?  Look at what we have done to the man who refused to conform his ideals to popular taste, who refused to compromise his integrity.  We have put him in a tiny box and asked you to copy him" (Schiff, Schindler, Goldsmith-Thomas & Newell, 2003), Professor Watson explains to her students, which is a good example of how high culture becomes part of popular culture.
Storey (2009) explains another point with regards to high culture, that Stuart Hall and Paddy Whannel believe that not all high culture is good, nor is all popular culture bad, that there are shades of gray based on popular discrimination (p. 52).  In the case of "Mona Lisa Smile," Professor Watson is asking her students to look at the world around them from outside of themselves, to see what others see.  She says in the movie, "Contemporary art . . . what will future scholars see when they study us?  A portrait of women today.  There you are ladies" (Schiff, Schindler, Goldsmith-Thomas & Newell, 2003).  Professor Watson is showing them a slide of an advertisement which is exactly what a Wellseley graduate is expected to do, what she is trained to be: cook, clean, and care for her husband and children.  That is all she is expected to do, regardless of pedigree, education, or even what she wants.  The advertisements of the day are not good or bad, simply are a reflection of what is. 
Finally, the story told in "Mona Lisa Smile" is comparative with other movies of similar interests, such as "Titanic," in which an upper class woman is challenged by a man of lower-class to be herself regardless of her station in life.  She appears to be all that she should be, and yet early on in the film, the audience is shown that she has appreciation for the art of Monet, which in her time is a contemporary artist, but who is now considered fine art even though it is mass produced for everyone to see and enjoy, which shows another example of where high culture becomes popular culture.

In conclusion, "Mona Lisa Smile" tells a gripping story about a woman who is attempting to break the social norm by giving the women of Wellseley College something more to aspire to.  Professor Watson shows the students in her classroom just how effective art can be in regards to culture, whether it is high or low, good or bad, does not matter, but that each woman sees for herself the truth and questions that truth.  The art depicted in the film is a reflection of the setting in which the story is told from, which is conservative, privileged, and elitist, where the women at Wellseley are taught, "Your sole responsibility will be taking care of your husband, and children . . . but the grade that matters the most is the one he gives you" (Schiff, Schindler, Goldsmith-Thomas & Newell, 2003), meaning her husband.
References
Schiff, P. (Producer), Schindler, D. (Producer), and Goldsmith-Thomas, E. (Producer) & Newell, M. (Director). (2003). Mona Lisa Smile [Netflix].  United States: Revolution Studios.
Storey, J. (2009). Cultural Theory and Popular Culture An Introduction. Dorchester, Dorset: Pearson Education Limited.

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