This feels relevant to me in light of a recent tirade about the Mona Lisa that I got going on after a few drinks with the cousins a couple weeks ago...
I've learned in the last few years that I rather enjoy art museums. I thought they were for old people when I was a kid. Now that I'm a man of a certain age, I find myself loving them.
I don't really know much about art aside from words like "perspective" and "contrast" and "juxtaposition" and "balance." But it doesn't stop me from having wild opinions about it, just like the unwashed golfer has plenty of opinions about golf courses.
The problem with your question, taken literally, is twofold for me:
- The sanctity with which the Mona Lisa is treated is preposterous to me. It's a boring portrait painting in drab colors that somehow draws ridiculous crowds of tourists to gawk at it. I saw it in person on a school trip as a teenager and the experience almost certainly contributed to my then-perception that art museums are for boring old people. Presented with the greatest collection of art in the world, our group ran from the Mona Lisa to the Venus de Milo to the Winged Victory of Samothrace and stood 8 rows deep so we could notch our belts, missing all the cool stuff along the way. I get that it was painted by one of the greatest minds in history, but it just doesn't do it for me.
- But hell, Andy Warhol is just a socialite who got ahead of the "neon colors" game. He could pop-art the hell out of the Mona Lisa and I still wouldn't want to look at it.
So I don't know. I guess I'm agreeing with you?
I miss my buddy Josh Tarble's occasional rants about sacred GCA cows. He once suggested that Old Tom Morris might be overrated as a designer, and speculated that his design technique might have just been arriving onsite with his bag, smacking his featherie around, and putting stakes in the ground wherever it landed and calling those spots fairways, tees, and greens. Probably not accurate. Hilarious to think about - he phrased his hypothesis better than I paraphrase it.
And yet, even if that's exactly what Old Tom did, I don't know that Tom Fazio could come in and improve an Old Tom course.
John, I THINK we first met at Hyde Park years ago when Tim Liddy hosted a group there. Do you recall attending that? Do you remember his presentation prior to the round about the since-completed changes to 13, the hard-dogleg-left par 5? His goal wasn't to "restore" it, but rather, to "sympathetically renovate" it to bring out more of Ross' principles on a course that was constructed with a lower budget than what the modern club could afford. I found that compelling and very reasonable - the idea that the original design could be improved, but striving to do so in keeping with wha
t he thought the original architect's wishes might well have been.