Rhapsody in Blue
Medium: Archival Pigment Print
Year: 2023
"The word “rhapsody” originates from the Greek rhaptein, meaning “to stitch or sew,” and ōidē, meaning “song” or “poetry.” Translated literally, it signifies a stitched-together song or poem. Today, the word is used to describe “an effusively enthusiastic or ecstatic expression of feeling.” There’s a good chance you’ve heard George Gershwin’s musical composition sharing the same name as the title. If not in full, then at least in part. And if you haven’t, take a moment to listen—this time with your eyes closed. Imagine animals stretching 50 feet long, twirling and tumbling—suspended in water, as if in slow motion. This piece, premiering in 1924, was a fusion of classical and jazz elements. It was met with mixed reception; critics frequently labeled the erratic components as “melodic incoherence.” It plays as if you’re jumping between chapters in a book—between chapters of different books. Different genres, even. Turn the page forward a century and the story moves from Midtown Manhattan to the cobalt blue waters off the small island of Dominica. The composers here are whale-sized. After emerging from the depths following their hunt, sperm whales may take a pause from their linear movement at the surface to socialize. The whales rub their massive bodies together as they generate a clamor of clicks to communicate. The motions look cumbersome and clumsy, but the element of touch between the animals is critical for the formation of social bonds, as it is for us. This display is far from coordinated—a barrage of different movements and sounds clashing in every which way. But the beauty isn’t in the form. It’s in the feeling."





