On Saturday our excellent friend Frank drove us into New York to visit the Sienese painting exhibition at the Metropolitan Museum. The exhibition will be up for only a couple more weeks, so that it was perhaps a little more crowded than I would have liked, but of course the paintings were magnificent. It is a matter of wonders. The paintings themselves are individual treasures, and it is wonderful to me that, even in old age, I am still privileged to see such beautiful things entirely new to me. Ordinarily, a visit like this would inspire me to write a little essay about them. Even so this week my attention has to be directed elsewhere. It must be comparatively rare for a couple of octogenarians living in a quiet corner of an east-coast college town to be privy to fairly earth-shattering events playing out some twenty-five hundred miles to the west, but that is the situation we are in. I am referring to the destructive wildfires, fanned by strong winds, that have been hop-scotching through some of the tonier areas of northwest Los Angeles, and particularly the neighborhood of Pacific Palisades. They have captured the whole world's attention, but we perhaps have a special interest. Immediately to the east of some of the incinerated mansions is the Getty Museum, which is distinct from though obviously related to the Getty Villa, a huge waterfront house that back in the day was the tycoon’s private residence. After additions and modifications the Villa now houses most of the institution’s significant holdings in ancient Greek and Roman artefacts. Our daughter Katherine is the President and Chief Executive Officer of the J. Paul Getty Trust, and among the most fundamental of her responsibilities, and certainly an awesome one, is the guardianship of these world treasures. Both the Getty Center and the Getty Villa have been threatened—indeed continue to be threatened—by the fires. Naturally these circumstances have given us a particular interest in the ongoing national calamity playing out in and around Los Angeles.
Between the classical holdings of the Villa and the much larger and eclectic ones in the Getty Museum on the main campus—an enormous museum surrounded by specialized libraries, conservation ateliers, etc.—a serious fragment of the artistic heritage of our human species has been under threat by wildfire. One can hardly imagine the urgency and anxiety that Katy and her colleagues have been facing—so far with good success, thank God. And speaking of the deity, the concept of the act of God—that is, a disturbing event for which no specific individual human responsibility can be plausibly assigned—seems to be waning in the collective litigious consciousness. The mayor of Los Angeles is facing finger-wagging for having been in Ghana at the time disaster struck, though it is not clear to me that her absence exacerbated an eighty-mile-per hour firestorm, let alone was its cause. Cnut couldn’t control the tides, and he was a king. We hope for demonstrable competence in our elected officials, but too many of them are satisfied with the first and indispensable ability: to get elected. Even so I would hope that the rancor of our recent election season might end, and that we might sympathize with, perhaps even grieve for, our fellow countrymen in such manifest distress.
But this cataclysm has set me on a trip down memory lane, for as a kid I lived briefly in various places in California—including Los Angeles, though not in one of its classier quarters. We lived in the neighborhood called Westchester, at the time one of the city’s modest but salubrious areas, though very near the airport which even then (circa 1950) seemed to have large, noisy planes coming or going every five minutes. It was a simpler world. I remember that my father bought a new Chevrolet—the only brand new car I had ever seen up close—for what seemed to me the astronomical price of a thousand dollars! At that time I had no first-hand experience of the gold coast neighborhoods that have been in the news on account of their actual or prospective incineration. The O. J. Simpson trial brought the prophetically named Brentwood to the world’s attention. And I had a distinguished medievalist colleague and friend who taught at UCLA and whom I visited a couple of times at his fabulous house on toney Outpost Drive where, I learned, several of his near neighbors were movie stars and celebrity “adjacents”. There was a later episode that for a while had the fancy houses of fancy people in that part of L.A. featured in the national press: that of the “Bling Ring”. A group of overprivileged young people valiantly battled against their existential ennui by breaking into the houses of rich and famous people, more or less incidentally stealing valuable garments and other gaudy upscale souvenirs. As I recall, they made a particular victim of Paris Hilton, confusing me, as I at first thought that was a hotel but was actually a person. Indeed, I believe I saw just yesterday a report that Ms. Hilton’s house has burned to the ground, though it might not have been the same residence as that of the Bling Ring era.
The social, cultural, and economic prestige of a comparatively small number of the fire’s victims has attracted the attention of the popular press; but that should not disguise the fact that this terrible event is a true national human disaster affecting many thousands of our fellow citizens. Indeed, it may take a good deal of time to absorb the implications for one of the world’s great cities. And while it may not be a second Lisbon earthquake—the terrible event that challenged the bourgeoning optimism of the heirs of the European Enlightenment—it is necessarily a lugubrious reminder of enduring human limitation and fragility in a world we only pretend to own.