What Makes Something Quintessential? It seems like, to effectively call something "quintessential" you would imply that nothing better of the same nature could follow it. Is "quintessential" Art the simulation from which simulacra proceeds? Could this be what is meant by "perfection"? Can quintessential Art exist? Is the concept too totalizing?
After
Rebel Without A Cause, you could say that there could never be a film that was as good that was like it. I don't think that perfection exists abstractly, but could this be indicative of something that is "perfect"? Can quintessentiality effectively supplant the concept of perfection? Should it, or is perfection only meaningful when considered abstractly?
Vincent Van Gogh's paintings of sunflowers can be considered to be the quintessential paintings of sunflowers. You can't, any longer, paint sunflowers without somehow being influenced by Van Gogh. Western civilization seems, to me, to be obsessed with the creation of perfect art. Consider that there is a genre of music called
Art music whose creators are ostensibly supposed to surpass what one is capable of while creating music. It's not just that Art music denotes an elevated status of music, it implies that one has transcended music itself. I don't actually think that Art music exists and am only pointing this out as evidence of my prior claim. Could it be that the real cultural project of Western civilization is to produce quintessential art? If so, is this a good thing? Why shouldn't art be as good as it can be? Should a person even seek to create timeless art? What will such a project mean for artists? What does it mean for an audience? Should all Art seek to be quintessential? Perhaps by become wholly idiosyncratic, all Art would.
As an aside, by how I have defined "quintessential" I am going to discount that Olivier's
Hamlet is the quintessential
Hamlet. It's a pretty good film, but it's just that. There is no quintessential
Hamlet.