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Regular:
Daria,
Quinn,
Helen,
Jane,
Trent,
Tom,
Brittany,
Sandi,
Stacy,
Tiffany,
Ms. Barch,
Ms. Defoe,
Mr. O'Neill
Guest:
Jesse Moreno,
Nicholas Campbell,
Max Tyler,
Wind Lane,
Amanda Lane,
Vincent Lane,
Steve Taylor,
Gary,
caricaturist,
head contractor
Non-Speaking:
Jake,
Kevin
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A music video Jane is shooting for the Mystik Spiral song "Mr. Normal" is disrupted when the gazebo in the back yard collapses. (The band escapes uninjured, though they're all "traumatized" for the next few weeks.) Jane and Trent are willing to write off the gazebo until Wind shows up and becomes upset at its destruction, saying that it was their parents' "naming gazebo." Jane works out an arrangement with the perpetually broke Trent: she'll pay for a new one if he makes all the arrangements to get it built. She decides to sell some of her paintings at Lawndale's "Art in the Park" event, but they don't exactly fly off the shelves. In fact, the only one that generates any interest at all is her upside-down Van Gough reproduction. One such interested customer is Gary, the owner of a local art gallery that specializes in reproductions of famous works of art, who's so impressed by her talent that he offers her a job: make reproductions for his gallery in return for a share of the profits from each sale. Meanwhile, the Fashion Club has a group portrait drawn by a caricature artist; unfortunately, none of them appears to have learned the concept of "caricature," because they become horrified at what the artist has drawn and vow to exact their revenge. Their attempts to enlist Helen's help in this matter, however, are not very successful (Tiffany even asks her to have the guy's fingers broken!). On the art front, Jane becomes more and more wrapped up in painting reproductions, so much so that she starts to lose all desire to paint her own original work, though she long ago made enough to pay for the new gazebo. (Speaking of which, construction is going at a snail's pace, thanks to lazy workers and Trent's inability to get tough with them.) Worried that she's becoming a hack, and inventing paranoid fantasies that Gary's really an international art forger passing off reproductions so good they're indistinguishable from the originals, she enlists Daria's help to infiltrate Gary's Gallery and find out who was the last person to buy one of her reproductions. That person turns out to be Steve Taylor, who deflates her paranoid fantasies when he points out that you can easily tell it's a fake. That and Trent's accusation of "selling out" are enough to convince her to get out of the reproduction business and back to her own original artwork. Fired with new-found determination, she cracks the whip on the gazebo builders and tells them to finish in four hours or they don't get paid... and drafts Trent into service to help them finish on time. All their hard work turns out to be for naught, however, as Amanda and Vincent Lane return home and tell them that they're going to tear down "that ugly old thing" (which, it turns out, was never a "naming gazebo" to begin with; they only told Wind that to keep him from changing his name to "Ronald"). And the "evil caricature"? When Quinn and Sandi resolve to destroy it after failing to get their revenge, they can't find it. As it turns out, Stacy had it all along and has pinned it up on the inside of her closet door, because hers was the only image to be portrayed in a positive light (as a cute girl surrounded by little hearts, smiling and holding a flower).
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Gazebo Troubles:
The episode starts out with Mystik Spiral shooting a music video while
sitting on the dilapidated Lane family gazebo. They weren't exactly
doing anything; I'd expect them to at least be pretending to play their
instruments. Anyway, they did have a fog machine set up so they could
mystically disappear. But, since the gazebo was old and about to fall
apart and the fog machine didn't really work, the structure came
crashing down. Other than the band being "traumatized for a few weeks,"
it was no big deal. Until, out of nowhere, Wind shows up and declares
the downed gazebo the "naming gazebo" (which we found out later was a
crock) and convinces Jane and Trent to rebuild it (if it was so
important, why didn't he rebuild it?). They fell for it and had
to come up with a plan. Since Trent has no money and plenty of time,
Jane decided to try to sell some of her paintings to pay for it -- only
if Trent did all of the other work. He valiantly tried to get out of it
(forgetting about the "trauma") but reluctantly started his search for
some "gazebo numbers."
Artsy Artsy:
Naturally, Jane had to find an outlet to display her paintings, and the
"Art in the Park" event was a perfect place to try. Unfortunately, her
original works weren't garnering too much interest, and it wasn't like
she was overcharging (twenty-five bucks isn't that much). However, one
of her works was attracting a lot of attention: her upside-down Van Gogh
(even though the "upside-down" part was the attention grabber). Jane was
able to parlay this attention into a job re-creating famous artwork for
Gary's Gallery. At first, this was a good idea; Jane was able to raise
the money she needed through her art. But after a while, the gig had her
questioning her abilities.
Defaced:
Meanwhile, as the Fashion Club was taking in all the splendor that is
"Art in the Park," they came upon a caricature artist and decided it
would be a good idea if they posed for a quick portrait. Of course, when
they viewed the finished product, they (or, more accurately,
seventy-five percent of them) reacted very badly. So badly, they decided
that they needed to take some sort of legal action to regain their
"losses." I guess they didn't really get the whole point of caricatures
(i.e. they're supposed to be exaggerations of the subject, even if they
are embarrassing). And while they all agreed, Stacy only agreed
halfheartedly (one of the many clues to the happy ending, that I
admittedly missed the first time through).
Trent Versus the Gazebo Men, Round One:
Trent, doing all the legwork for the rebuild the gazebo project, was
competent enough to hire some workmen to rebuild the thing. The problem
was that they weren't exactly model workers; showing up days late,
sitting around, and drinking. Trent's slacker tendencies made it hard
for him to do anything to get them working. It's almost as if he were
unable or unwilling to force his will on them to do what they were being
paid to do.
What's in It for Me?
After some success on the re-creation circuit, which was more than
enough to pay for the gazebo, and some doubts that she was becoming a
two-bit hack by continuing, Jane went to Gary to quit. But Gary
convinced her to stay on to help "build a nest egg" (in reality, he knew
that she was good and her "works" were selling). When she sort of stuck
to her guns, he offered a higher pay rate and more flexibility in the
work, and she caved, temporarily.
Legal Brief:
The Fashion Club, one at a time, tried to convince Helen that they had
some sort of case against the caricature artist. She politely told Quinn
that their characters weren't defamed by the drawing because it doesn't
really harm their reputations. She was frustrated trying to explain to
Sandi that only lawyers can be disbarred. Finally, she declined
Tiffany's request to have the guy's thumbs broken. Anyway, this little
subplot breathed some much needed humor into an episode that was
otherwise sort of angst-ridden.
Trent Versus the Gazebo Men, Round Two:
Trent wakes up early in the afternoon, expecting something on the gazebo
work to be done by two o'clock, as he was told. He gets up and the
workmen are still sitting around. At Jane's urging, he tries to order
them to get to work and eventually backs off when they call him "The
Man." He had a hard time yelling at them. Ultimately, Jane had to play a
trump card to get the gazebo built -- do it in four hours, or you don't
get paid... and Trent had to help.
If You Say So:
Jane's line of rationalization for continuing to work on copying famous
paintings was that she was only doing it to support herself in her own
original work. But she was never getting to her own work, so what
good is it to support something that's not happening? I don't even think
that was the only thing bothering her, though. The "copying burnout"
also was consuming her. The money was more important than the art, and
working on the paintings for Gary just wasn't as fun for her (I mean,
her body was even telling her that through her sore wrist). By the way,
we finally learned why Mystik Spiral never does any covers. I always
thought it was because they just weren't that good at playing their
instruments.
Don't Blame Yourself, Until You Have To:
While wrestling with her little puzzle about whether what she was doing
was wrong, Jane was inspired by a Sick, Sad World promo about a
counterfeiting operation to conjure up a "paranoid delusion" that Gary
was a kingpin of a huge art counterfeiting ring. So, she (with Daria's
help) attempted to try to "solve" this mystery by finding out who has
been buying her paintings. They find out that Steve Taylor is a frequent
customer at the gallery. They then go to his house and, after dealing
with Brittany for a while, they find him and one of Jane's knock-offs.
He proceeds to confirm Jane's worst fears when asked if it's an original
work of art. He considers the re-creation artists to be a "bunch of
hacks" that do a fairly good job for the money they make. After this
endeavor, she finally realizes that her employment at the gallery has
been stifling her own creativity and bringing her down (and that she was
channeling it into those delusions) and she decided to quit.
Good Things Come...
When seventy-five percent of the Fashion Club finally conceded that they
had no legal recourse against that radical caricaturist, they decided to
just destroy the "offensive picture." Of course, they couldn't find it;
Stacy took it, because she was the only one that looked happy in the
drawings. This is exactly the kind of thing she needs to grow into her
own person (maybe she's going to get a spin-off).
As usual, there isn't much else to mention that I haven't already gone
over. Well, Vincent and Amanda Lane showed up to declare Wind's "naming
gazebo" story an elaborate ploy to keep him from changing his name.
Generally, I liked what I saw in "Art Burn." We see Jane conflicted by
working at something that was borderline plagiarism and eventually
realizing that it probably wasn't a good idea. That was contrasted by
the more humorous subplot with the Fashion Club and Stacy's probably
improved confidence. Overall, a fairly strong episode with a one point
penalty for having the lamest episode title pun ever (though I had to
say it out lout a couple of times before I figured it out -- kind of
like "Erin the Head").
Grade:
B+
Daria as a Whole, 7-6 or 6-7:
After going through the last couple of episodes that have aired, and
remembering the episodes that led up to the midseason break in season
four, I think I have some circumstantial evidence that the Daria
staff was expecting to have the past two seasons split differently that
they actually were. They were probably thinking that "I Loathe a Parade"
and "Lucky Strike" were meant to take us into the drought, as opposed to
"Of Human Bonding" and "Art Burn." The effect of this is that the
episodes that actually did get shown at the end of the first half of
each season (the "#x07" episodes) were overshadowed by the episodes in
the number six slot, which were far superior (though #407 and #507
didn't stink).
Copyright © 2001 Mike Quinn [All Rights Reserved]. Used with
permission. The views presented in this review are those of the author,
and may or may not necessarily be those of Outpost Daria.
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