Once Again- When The
Capitalist World Was Young-With Dutch And Flemish Paintings In Mind
By Brad Fox, Jr.
They say that Allan
Jackson, a guy who grew up in North Adamsville south of Boston and a guy who as
the neighborhood guys he used to hang out with used to say was “from
hunger” which seems self-explanatory,
was kind of weird about stuff like politics and art. Stuff that seemed weird to
me anyway when it got explained to me by my father, same name as me and hence
junior, one night when he decided that I needed one, a drink or two, and, two,
to be straightened out about Allan. Straightened out meaning that he would do
his royal highness imperative thing with me which he has done with me since I
was a kid when he thought I had something, sometimes anything wrong.
Dad’s authority for the
straightening out was that he was one of the guys who knew Allan in those “from
hunger” days back in the 1960s when the whole neighborhood, including the Fox
family, was wedded to that same condition. He felt since he had already
straightened me out ad infinitum on
the Fox family “from hunger” story when I was about eight he could skip that
and run Allan’s story. I have to tell you though that Bradley Fox, Senior
pulled himself up from under by the bootstraps and went on to run a couple of
small high tech specialty plants which were contracted to Raytheon to make
materials for their various very lucrative defense contracts and while he sold
off those businesses when he retired Raytheon is still working off the public
teat with those lucrative, very lucrative defense contracts. I also have to
tell you that except for a couple of months out in San Francisco in 1967 when
the Summer of Love for his generation was in full bloom at a time when his
whole crowd was guilt-tripped into going out West by a mad man guy they hung
around with whom Dad always called Scribe he went straight-arrow from high
school to college (two years), marriage, kids, a decent and “not from hunger” life
passed on to his kids and then that fairly recent retirement.
That combination strong
work ethic and straight arrow family man would characterize most of his
hang-out youthful crowd with the big exception of Scribe. And Allan who
followed him for a while anyway before Scribe got too weird, got catch up with
a cocaine addiction and fell down, was helped falling down by two straight
bullets in Mexico back in the 1970 in circumstances Dad would not talk about,
won’t talk about even now since he says it hurts him too much to think about
Scribe’s fate, a fate that except for a few happy turns might have befallen
him. So the “Allan following Scribe” part consisted of essentially two things-a
visceral hatred of current day capitalism partially derived through an
old-fashioned now somewhat obsolete except for academics Marxism, you know,
greedy capitalist (my father to a certain extent although he was not, is
not, greedy) versus downtrodden workers
AND a love of painting from the early days of capitalism-when it was beginning
to come full bloom in places like London, Amsterdam and Antwerp-painters like
Rembrandt, Hals, Ruebens.
Dad said it was hard to
say when Scribe and therefore Allan got into radical politics since no way in
high school when they all formed lasting bonds did those guys have such ideas.
They would have been run out of town, would emphatically not have been hanging
around Harry’s Variety Store with Dad and the other guys spouting “commie” rag
stuff in those Cold War beat the Russians to a pulp days. What they all cared
about, what they all talked about was cars, not having cars the fate of most of
them during high school, girls, and either not having them of how to get into
their pants, Dad’s expression not mine, booze, and how to get somebody old
enough to “buy” for them, and endlessly rock and roll music, and how to use
that hot rock and roll to get a girl into a car, get her softened up with booze
and in the mood to do what he called “do the do” which I think is pretty
self-explanatory as well. So maybe girls was all they really cared about in the
end and the other stuff was just talk to talk. One way or another Scribe and
his ardent follower, his “girl” some of the guys would say just to do a little
“fag” baiting long before even guys like Dad got hip that being gay was okay, that
they were not the devils incarnate, were as hyped to the chasing girls scene as
all the others.
Dad figured that what
probably happened to turn them around was their getting drafted and sent to
Vietnam (neither events at the same time but close together) and when they
returned they were very different in ways Dad couldn’t explain but different
mainly because neither man wanted to talk about the stuff they saw, did, or saw
others do in what they would always call “Nam. So they started hanging around
with college guys and gals, maybe others too, all young and bright-eyed over in
Cambridge the other side of Boston. Started going to things called study groups
and such. The long and short of it was before long they were longed-haired,
bearded hippie-looking guys just like a million other guys around Boston at the
time Dad said. Getting arrested for this and that, stuff called civil
disobedience not robberies or mayhem or anything like it. Kept talking about
class struggle, kicking the bosses’ asses, decaying capitalism, imperialism all
the stuff you read about in a Government class and then let drop like a lead
balloon after an exam. That lasted like I said until Scribe fell down and Allan
went back to school on the G.I. Bill.
The craving for Dutch
and Flemish painting Dad said was easier to explain, at least he thought so. It
seemed like this Allan was a holy goof, a wacko to me in our old neighborhood
terms out in the leafy suburbs. Dad said, and this is the way Allan explained
it to him so take it for what its worth since you know I think it is the
uttering of a holy goof. According to this Marxist schematic even though now capitalism
(now now or fifty years ago now it doesn’t matter since it is still around) has
turned in on itself, has lost its energy, has become a brake on serious human
progress that was not always the case. In the early days when it was giving
feudalism the boot it was what they called “progressive,” meaning it was better
than feudalism and so did things then that could be supported in historical
terms by latter day radicals. Okay, Allan, whatever you say.
Here’s where I think it
really gets weird, art, all the cultural expressions, get reflected in the
emerging new system of organizing society so when Rembrandt say painted those
prosperous dour-looking merchants, town burghers, and shop owners (and their
wives, also dour, see above. usually in separate portraits showing that had
enough real money to pay for two expensive paintings or else couldn’t stand
being in the same room together for the long sittings) he was reflecting the
bright light times of this new system that would wind up dominating the world.
According to Dad Allan and another guy went, I think he said, to the Museum of
Fine Arts in Boston Allan where he flipped out over these odd-ball portrait or
domestic scene paintings in the 16th and 17th century
Dutch-Flemish section. Said, and Dad quoted this, that was when capitalism was
young and fresh and you could feel it in almost every painting. Also said while
the stuff wouldn’t pass art muster today it was like catnip back then. Like I
said a holy goof. And if you don’t believe me go, if you are near a major
museum which would have such art, and check it out for yourself because young
or old, Rembrandt or not, this stuff is old hat as far as I am concerned.
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