TEXT B "Visual Music" is a
fine-tuned, highly diverting, deceptively radical exhibition about the
relationship of music and modern art, lately arrived here at the Hirshhorn
Museum. In its hippy-trippy way, it rewrites a crucial chapter of
history. Its subtitle is "Synaesthesia in Art and Music Since
1900." Aristotle formulated the idea that each of the five senses—smell, taste,
touch, hearing and sight—had its own proper and distinct sphere of activity.
There were overlaps, he said (movement pertained both to sight and touch); and
he speculated that the mysteries of color harmony might have something to do
with musical harmony, an idea that would resonate for centuries. Musical
harmony, as an expression of geometry, was thought to be useful to the study of
art and architecture from the Renaissance on. But-the notion that there was an
essential separation among the sensual spheres persisted into the early 19th
century. At the same time reports began to emerge of rare people who said they
experienced two sensations simultaneously: they saw colors when they heard
sounds, or they heard sounds when they ate something. The condition was called
synaesthesia. It’s no coincidence that scientific interest in
synaesthesia coincided with the Symbolist movement in Europe, with its stresses
on metaphor, allusion and mystery. Synaesthesia was both metaphorical and
mysterious. Scientists were puzzled. People who claimed to have it couldn’t
agree about exactly what they experienced. "To ordinary individuals one of these
accounts seems just as wild and lunatic as another but when the account of one
seer is submitted to another seer," noted the Victorian psychologist and
polymath Sir Francis Galton in 1883, "the latter is scandalized and almost angry
at the heresy of the former." I have come across via the color
historian John Gage an amusing account from some years later by the phonologist
Roman Jakobson, who studied a multilingual woman with synaesthesia. The woman
described to him perceiving colors when she heard consonants and vowels or even
whole words: "As time went on words became simply sounds, differently colored,
and the more outstanding one color was, the better it remained in my memory.
That is why, on the other hand, I have great difficulty with short English
words like jut, jug, lie, lag, etc.: their colors simply run together." Russian,
she also told Jakobson, has "a lot of long, black and brown words," while German
scientific expressions "are accompanied by a strange, dull yellowish
glimmer." Concerning the word "synaesthesia", which of the following statement is NOT true
A.It is derived from the theory of Aristotle. B.There are people who claimed to had experienced it. C.The idea influenced European arts greatly, especially after Renaissance. D.The idea, although proved to be true in modem times, was not useful in the past.