Thursday, October 24, 2019
Painting Analysis in Jane Eyre Essay
From the opening chapter of Charlotte Brontà «Ã¢â¬â¢s Jane Eyre the reader becomes aware of the powerful role that art plays. There is something extraordinary about the pictures Jane admires from other artists, as well as the work she creates herself. Her solitary pastime often operates as an outlet of pain, either past or present, and offers her the opportunity to deal with unpleasant emotions and memories. Janeââ¬â¢s art transcends her isolation by bringing her into contact with others who see it; it functions as a bridge between her desire to be alone and her need for companionship. Despite her struggles with inner conflict and the people in her life, Janeââ¬â¢s art helps her find personal power, marking her true identity as her own woman. Whether it is her love of drawings or the creations of her own, artwork has provide Jane a means of agency to survive the harrowing conditions afforded to the orphan child, allowing her to emerge as a wealthy, independent social equal. The first glimpse of Janeââ¬â¢s resourcefulness and mental escape comes from one of the first activities in the novel. She escapes from her powerless place in the hostile Reed household temporarily through a book ââ¬Å"taking care that it should be one stored with picturesâ⬠(2). She retreats to a solitary window-seat, ââ¬Å"having drawn the red moreen curtain nearly closeâ⬠¦ shrined in double retirement,â⬠and buries herself in Berwickââ¬â¢s A History of British Birds (2). The window offered protection, but not separation from the outside: ââ¬Å"At intervals, while turning over the leaves of my book, I studied the aspect of that winter afternoonâ⬠(2). Through the images and quotes contained therein, Jane manages to acquire the only kind of power to she access to- knowledge, ââ¬Å"Each picture told a story; mysterious often to my undeveloped understanding and imperfect feelings, yet ever profoundly interestingâ⬠(3). Her interpretation of the illust rations provides training for the young girl, who will later produce her own images. Her quest for identity and power has begun, and the young orphan begins to discover how she can begin her journey to find her place as a social equal. Interrupting her happy retreat, looking at the pictures, is her wretched cousin John Reed. He claims that Jane, as a dependent in his household, has no right to look at books without his permission. As punishment for her transgression, he throws her favorite Berwickââ¬â¢s Birds at her, physically knocking Jane down with its force (3-5). A fight ensues, with Jane comparing Reedââ¬â¢s actions to those of murderers, slave drivers, and Roman emperors. Adults intervene; Jane is blamed for the conflict and is confined to the ââ¬Å"red roomâ⬠where she experiences terrible suffering. In this incident, Janeââ¬â¢s visual pleasure takes the form of looking at art objects in prints and illustrated books. Instead of being a harmless leisure activity, ââ¬Å"this looking is regarded by the male character as a provocation, setting off various stratagems aimed to reconfirm rights of ownership by laying down restrictive or subordinating conditions of accessâ⬠(Kromm 374). Confron tations between Jane and male authority would follow her from her removal from the Reed home to her schooling at Lowood. Early on in her education at Lowood, Jane finds herself in a situation similar to that of the breakfast room incident at Gateshead. Trying to escape the notice of the headmaster Mr. Brocklehurst. With no massive curtain to shield her this time, she ââ¬Å"held [her] slate in such a manner as to conceal [her] faceâ⬠(62). The ââ¬Å"treacherous slateâ⬠slipped from her grasp and crashed to the floor. As she ââ¬Å"rallied [her] forces for the worst. It cameâ⬠(62). In a humiliating flight of indignation, Mr. Brocklehurst, placing Jane on a stool for all to see, publically admonishes her for dropping school property. He further attempts to ostracize her from the others by condemning her a liar (information he received from Mrs. Reed, Janeââ¬â¢s wretched benefactress). Jane serves the time, designated by her punisher, sobbing and full of shame. She realizes that this wrongdoing would eliminate Miss Templeââ¬â¢s promise to teach her drawing and to learn French. Jane descends from the stool in search of Miss Temple, her beloved superintendent, who often ââ¬Å"listens to Mr. Brocklehurstââ¬â¢s sermonizing in ladylike silence with her mouth ââ¬Ëclosed as if it would have required a sculptorââ¬â¢s chisel to open itââ¬â¢Ã¢â¬ (Gilbert 784). Miss Temple kindly allows Jane to speak in her defense, such an unfamiliar concept coming from the Reed residence. Once Janeââ¬â¢s story is corroborated she is rewarded with beginning lessons in drawing and French. Her subsequent years at the Lowood Institution, although glossed over by Brontà «, are when Jane emerges as an artist. Her first sketch is landscape with a crooked cottage whose graphic limitations bring about a daydream that evening in which she envisions a feast of ââ¬Å"more accomplished imageryâ⬠(72). Each imaginary scene is one she anticipates producing with her own hands: picturesque landscapes with ruins, lowing cattle that recall Dutch painters like Cuyp, butterflies hovering near roses, birds pecking at fruit. Through this elegiac, bucolic, wish-fulfilling dreamscape, she sees herself become adept at making ââ¬Å"freely-penciled,â⬠rather than minutely copied, renderings of the natural world intensively and expansively observed. (Kromm 377-378) Janeââ¬â¢s goal is clearly much higher than reproducing otherââ¬â¢s works. She sees herself acquiring the skills of a professional artist. Jane learns at Lowood that she can create and lose herself in alternate worlds when she draws and paints. She shows the ability to envision a cheerful life different from her circumstances. However, following Miss Templeââ¬â¢s departure from Lowood, Jane returns to feelings of isolation. Once again she finds solace gazing out a window, realizing the promise the other side has to offer . Her ââ¬Å"restless desireâ⬠of life outside the classroom leads Jane to seek employment elsewhere. It is through her preparations to leave Lowood that the reader learns of Janeââ¬â¢s growth and achievement as an artist. Her ââ¬Å"pictorial facility is a landscape, a watercolor given to the superintendent of Lowood, who had interceded on her behalf with Brocklehurst to obtain for Jane a reference and permission to leave the schoolâ⬠(Kromm 379). The painting was framed, and placed prominently ââ¬Å"over the chimney-piece,â⬠in the parlor at Lowood. Her painting is one of several accomplishments that impress Bessie, the Gateshead servant who visits upon learning of Janeââ¬â¢s departure for her next job at Thornfield. Bessie thinks the painting is beautiful: ââ¬Å"It is as fine a picture as any Miss Reedââ¬â¢s drawing-master could paint, let alone the young ladies themselves, who could not come near itâ⬠(90). Jane now possesses the accomplishments of a lady, and ââ¬Å"to a degree which will ensure her economic independence as a teacher. The picture Bessie sees is not described; it has no significance for Jane other than as a social gestureâ⬠¦it functions simply as a milestone on her advance to independenceâ⬠(Milligate 316). Janeââ¬â¢s artistic confidence and her newly acquired ââ¬Å"social status,â⬠follow her to her next adventure at Thornfield. During her time as a governess, Janeââ¬â¢s art continues to gain the attention of others. Shortly after Rochesterââ¬â¢s first appearance at Thornfield, he summons Jane and tries to get to know Janeââ¬â¢s qualifications as governess for Adà ¨le. Rochester asks to view again some of her work the young girl had shown him, adding, ââ¬Å"I donââ¬â¢t know whether they were entirely of your doing: probably a master aided you?â⬠(124). Jane vehemently denies his accusation, yet Rochester remains skeptical. He orders Jane to ââ¬Å"fetch her portfolio,â⬠and investigates her work, promising her, ââ¬Å"I can recognize patchworkâ⬠(124). Somewhat satisfied after his perusal, that the work is from one hand, a hand that she confirms is her own. Focusing his attention on three watercolors he asks Jane, ââ¬Å"Where did you get your copies?â⬠When Jane replies ââ¬Å"Out of my head,â⬠he continues to goad her, ââ¬Å"That head I see now on your shoulders?â⬠(124). Jane passes his critical judgment without becoming unsettled. She offers her own critique of her work that is occupying Rochesterââ¬â¢s attention: ââ¬Å"her judgment upon them was ââ¬Ënothing wonderfulââ¬â¢ because her manual skill was not quite able to capture the vivid subjects that she had imagined with her ââ¬Ëspiritual eyeââ¬â¢Ã¢â¬ (Gates 36). The watercolor landscapes, although produced at Lowood, are far from the scene that been so admired: ââ¬Å"A seascape, a landscape, and polarscape respectively, each fantastic natural setting has the disturbing feature of a dead, fragmented, or cropped figureâ⬠(Kromm 379). In the seascape, a wrecked shipââ¬â¢s mast rises above the water in ââ¬Å"composition dominated by rough seas and clouds.â⬠A lone cormorant sits on the mast with a sparkling bracelet in its mouth ââ¬Å"pecked from the arm of a womanââ¬â¢s corpse lying almost submerged in the foregroundâ⬠(Kromm 379). The second painting shows a leafy, grassy hill with a large stretch of dark blue twilight sky. ââ¬Å"Rising into the skyâ⬠is a bust-length view of a woman: ââ¬Å"She is an allegorical figure, her gauzy lineaments and crown justifying her description as a ââ¬Ëvision of the Evening Star.ââ¬â¢ The pleasant otherworldliness of this princess-like delineation is subverted by the account of her features, which include wild-looking eyes and hair streaming in enervated disarrayâ⬠(Kromm 379). The third watercolor is a polarscape whose winter sky is ââ¬Å"piercedâ⬠by the peak of an iceberg against which a gigantic head rests, its forehead supported by two hands. The focus ââ¬Å"is entirely placed on the singular head whose black, bejeweled turban registers a note of orientalist exoticism. The eyes of this giant are glazed, fixed, blank, communicating only a sense of despairâ⬠(Kromm 379). Her descriptions of her work display the limitless depths of her imagination. They are, as Rochester observes, like something Jane ââ¬Å"must have seen in a dreamâ⬠(126). He asks whether she was happy when she painted them and remarks that she must surely have existed ââ¬Å"in a kind of artistââ¬â¢s dreamland while [she] blent and arranged these strange tintsâ⬠(126). ââ¬Å"Here Rochester catches the essence of surrealistic art, which tends toward the kind of involuntarism best known in dreams, aiming at automatism and toward the unconscious. Jane of course was not aiming anywhereâ⬠(Gates 37). Jane says she was simply ââ¬Ëabsorbedâ⬠and her subjects has ââ¬Å"risen vividly on [her] mindâ⬠(126). Jane has the visions but lacks the skill to accurately portray them: ââ¬Å"whereas the superintendentââ¬â¢s picture indicated accomplishments with social and economic value, these pictures reveal Janeââ¬â¢s emotional statusâ⬠¦she has made little progressâ⬠(Millgate 316). Jane is still maturing. The paintings may evidence a halt in her artistic promise, however, the conversation with Rochester, about her artistic promise, ignites a sense of equality between the pair. Jane views Rochesterââ¬â¢s investigatory comments as a, ââ¬Å"breath of lifeâ⬠¦ he is the only qualified critic of her art and soulâ⬠(Gilbert 352). Jane and Rochesterââ¬â¢s shared love of art plants the seeds of their mutual affection and appreciation of one another. Besides using her art as a means to access Janeââ¬â¢s thoughts, Rochester offers Janeââ¬â¢s work to the public. Rochester becomes, ââ¬Å"the link that enables Jane to expand her ability to share imaginationâ⬠(Cassell 112). She informs her reader, ââ¬Å"One day he had company to dinner, and had sent for my portfolio; in order, doubtless, to exhibit its contentsâ⬠(129). ââ¬Å"Jane placidly accepts Rochesterââ¬â¢s display of her work, perhaps as an affirmation of the value of her talent, or perhaps as a means to communicate her imaginative self with a larger audienceâ⬠(Cassell 112). Jane takes a risk and allows herself, through her work, to be vulnerable to societyââ¬â¢s scrutiny. Personal scrutiny, in addition to public, accompanies Janeââ¬â¢s work as it transitions from the familiar natural landscapes, to the unfamiliar world of portraiture. Here Jane uses her art as a sort of punishment for not seeing reality. The way Janeââ¬â¢s creative imagination goes to work on its materials is quite precisely revealed in the genesis of the pictures she actually completes while at Thornfield, those contrasting portraits of ââ¬Ëa Governess, disconnected, poor, and plainââ¬â¢ and of ââ¬ËBlanche, an accomplished lady of rankââ¬â¢ which she intends as medicine for a mind which love of Rochester has infected with wishful thinking. (Millgate 317) Janeââ¬â¢s ivory miniature of Blanche Ingram is executed before Jane has laid eyes on Blanche and is based upon Mrs. Fairfaxââ¬â¢s flattering description of her. When Jane asks Mrs. Fairfax for her opinion of Rochester, she says of the womanââ¬â¢s response, ââ¬Å"There are people who seem to have no notion of sketching a character, or observing and describing salient points, either in persons or things: the good lady evidently belonged to this classâ⬠(104). However, when describing Janeââ¬â¢s rival for Rochesterââ¬â¢s affection, Mrs. Fairfaxââ¬â¢s word is bond. Studying her own face in the mirror, she finishes her a charcoal self-portrait in less than two hours, ââ¬Å"omitting none of what she calls her defects, the harsh lines and displeasing irregularities of her face, refusing to exercise the artistââ¬â¢s option to use the chalk to soften or blur the sharp planes of her featuresâ⬠(Kromm 382). Jane paints Blancheââ¬â¢s portrait on smooth ivory, ââ¬Å"taking a fortnight to finish it, and the result is a Grecian beauty whose features are called smooth, soft, sweet, round, and delicateâ⬠(Kromm 382). Looking at both portraits, she asks herself which woman Rochester would prefer: ââ¬Å"The contrast was as great as self-control could desireâ⬠(162). The painting exercise becomes a means of self-discipline, and ââ¬Å"a way of representing social hierarchical position through the creation of concrete imagesâ⬠(Azim 192). Contemplating the two works, and their disparities, she puts herself firmly in her place. She scolds herself for her romantic fantasies about Rochester that could ruin herself and her career. The contrast between the real and the ideal ââ¬Å"is imagined and put forth, to keep in mind the distance between desire and realityâ⬠(Azim 193). Here Jane paints out of her mindââ¬â¢s eye, not in order to indulge her imagination, but to control it. Jane returns to Gateshead to visit her dying Aunt Reed. Bessie greats her kindly, but Jane otherwise receives a cold greeting from her aunt and cousins. Returning to such a disheartening place, coupled with missing Rochester, Jane uses her art as a means of comfort. She carries her art with her because art supplies her with ââ¬Å"occupation or amusementâ⬠(250). ââ¬Å"Her first sketch there shows her thoughts in line with Rochesterââ¬â¢s as she sketches the characters that he often associated with herâ⬠(Cassell 116). She draws: ââ¬Å"Fancy vignettes, representing any scene that happened momentarily to shape itself in the ever-shifting kaleidoscope of imagination: a glimpse of sea between two rocks; the rising moon, and a ship crossing its disk; a group of reeds and water-flags, and a naiadââ¬â¢s head, crowned with lotus-flowers, rising out of them; an elf sitting in a hedge-sparrowââ¬â¢s nest, under a wreath of hawthorn-bloom. (236-237) Her fantasies shift to real possibility, she sketches a face-Rochesterââ¬â¢s, all in heavy black pencil and complete with flashing eyes (237). Jane describing her own work and the qualities she seeks to emphasize in the portrait ââ¬â strength, determination, flexibility and spirit ââ¬â reinforce what Jane finds attractive in Rochester. The portrait of Rochester is involuntarily made and, in fact, ââ¬Å"helps to close the gap between the mind and the representational object: spontaneity, imagination, sexuality, and sexual desire combine to produce a portrait that faithfully represents the painterââ¬â¢s state of mindâ⬠(Azim 195). In a time of emotional need, she unconsciously conjures up ââ¬Å"a speaking likenessâ⬠of the man she loves (237). After leaving Thornfield, following the interrupted marriage ceremony, Janeââ¬â¢s art provides a temporary asylum, as she grieves for Rochester. During her stay at the Moor house, her artwork earns her the admiration of Diana and Mary Rivers. They are so impressed with her talents that they give her all of their drawing supplies (360). Once again Jane attributes her talents with social status when she remarks, ââ¬Å"My skill, greater in this one point than theirs, surprised and charmed themâ⬠(360). Their appreciation of her artistic skills, and their generosity help strengthen Janeââ¬â¢s weakened disposition. As Jane struggles to cope with losing everything that mattered to her, her artwork enlivens those around her-especially Rosamond Oliver. Janeââ¬â¢s art excites admiration, impressing Rochester with its ââ¬Å"peculiarâ⬠power and ââ¬Å"electrifyingâ⬠Rosamond with surprise and delight. Janeââ¬â¢s painting and sketching quietly ââ¬Å"satisfy an impulse toward a kind of display that is itself subordinated to pleasure in looking, as when she happily agrees to sketch a portrait of Rosamond: ââ¬ËI felt a thrill of artist-delight at the idea of copying from so perfect and radiant a modelââ¬â¢Ã¢â¬ (Newman 157). Janeââ¬â¢s first description of Rosamond presents a figure seen entirely from an artistââ¬â¢s angle: ââ¬Å"eyes shaped and colored as we see them in lovely picturesâ⬠¦the penciled browâ⬠¦the livelier beauties of tint and rayâ⬠¦Ã¢â¬ (372). ââ¬Å"The ease with which this terminology is manipulated shows a new detachment in Jane, as well as suggesting a certain superficiality in the figure she examsâ⬠(Millgate 319). Even though Jane can use her imaginative faculties to alleviate the pain of reality, she does not separate from reality (Cassell 116). She grieves constantly for the loss of Rochester and her identity. Her art does not offer the same gratifying rewards that it once did. Her work has continued to mature and is evident by Rosamondââ¬â¢s portrait. Mr. Oliver and St. John Rivers authenticate the precision of the portrait. The painting also ââ¬Å"causes St John to admit to Jane what she already knows ââ¬â that he is in love with Rosamond ââ¬â and it is while he gazes at the picture that he allows himself to give way to his feelings for a set period of time ââ¬â ââ¬Ëa little space for delirium and delusionââ¬â¢, he calls itâ⬠(Losano 256). The painting also serves another function. The portrait of Rosamond Oliver brings to fruition, Janeââ¬â¢s aspirations for independence. St. John recognizes her as the rightful heir of a fortune. His proof of her identity consists of a signature in ââ¬Å"the ravished margin of [a] portrait-cover,â⬠which Jane confronts as if it belonged to another: ââ¬Å"He got up, held it close to my eyes: and I read, traced in Indian ink, in my own handwriting, the words ââ¬ËJANE EYREââ¬â¢Ã¢â¬ (392). Jane construes her signature as ââ¬Å"the work doubtless of some moment of abstractionâ⬠and thus disowns it as the product of her own volition, even as it fulfills the conditions of he uncleââ¬â¢s will and her own desires to be financially independent and to belong to a family (Marcus 217). Jane Eyreââ¬â¢s art is mode of self-expression, revealing in rare glimpses her depth of character and aspirations for independence. As Millgate suggests, ââ¬Å"her work is one means of charting her growth to maturityâ⬠(315). Beginning in the window-seat at Gateshead, a ten-year-old girl escapes abuse and neglect by escaping through images in her beloved books, through twenty years of creating herself through her art, Jane ends her career as an artist when she becomes Mrs. Jane Rochester. In the account of her married life in the final chapter, all her imaginative activity and visionary skill are devoted to the task of embodying in words, for the benefit of her blind husband. Her gift of words helps her to create a new artist identity-a storyteller. Works Cited Azim, Firdous. ââ¬Å"Rereading Feminismââ¬â¢s Texts in Jane Eyre and Shirley.â⬠The Colonial Rise of the Novel: From Aphra Behn to Charlotte Brontà «. London: Routledge, 1993. Brontà «, Charlotte. Jane Eyre. New York: Barnes and Noble, Inc, 2001. Cassell, Cara. The ââ¬Å"Infernal Worldâ⬠: Imagination in Charlotte Brontà «Ã¢â¬â¢s Four Novels. Diss. Georgia State University, 2001. Gates, Barbara. ââ¬Å"Visionary Woe and Its Revision: Another Look at Jane Eyreââ¬â¢s Pictures.â⬠ARIEL, Vol. 7 (1976): 36-49. Gilbert, Sandra. ââ¬Å"Plain Janeââ¬â¢s Progress.â⬠Signs, Vol.2 (1977): 779-804. Kromm, Jane. ââ¬Å"Visual Culture and Scopic Custom in Jane Eyre and Villette.â⬠Victorian Literature and Culture, Vol. 26 (1998): 369-394. Losano, Antonia. The Woman Painter in Victorian Literature. Columbus: Ohio State University Press, 2008. Marcus, Sharon. ââ¬Å"The Profession of the Author: Abstraction, Advertising, and Jane Eyre.â⬠PMLA, Vol.110 (1995): 206-219 Millgate, Jane. ââ¬Å"Narrative Distance in Jane Eyre: The Relevance of the Pictures.â⬠The Modern Language Review, Vol.63 (1968): 315-319. Newman, Beth. ââ¬Å"Excepts from Subjects on Display.â⬠Charlotte Brontà «Ã¢â¬â¢s Jane Eyre: A Case Book. Ed. Elsie Browning Michie. NewYork: Oxford University Press, 2006. Starzyk, Lawrence. ââ¬Å"The Gallery of Memoryâ⬠: The Pictorial in Jane Eyre.â⬠Papers on Language and Literature, Vol.33 (1997): 288-307.
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.