Enter the world of artist turned superstar whose works command astronomical prices "sight unseen" but whose life has left him without inspiration.
The Story:
Jonathan Waxman is the artist as superstar, plunged into the exorbitant hype of the American art world where a publicist is as necessary as a brush and canvas. Just before his works are celebrated at an exhibition in London, Jonathan journeys to the English village where his former lover, Patricia, lives with her British husband, Nick. Archaeologists working on a dig in rural northern county, their spare existence is spent sifting through a Roman rubbish heap to discover the past. In their cold, remote house, Jonathan discovers an early painting of Patricia he'd done when they were young lovers. The subsequent struggle for the painting embodies the unreconciled passions of the past. Patricia has never forgiven Jonathan for leaving her, Nick despises Jonathan and the kind of art he produces, and Jonathan has never been able to recapture the inspiration and purity he felt when he painted Patricia. In taut scenes that dart from past to present and back, the characters are forced to deal with the unanswerable question of anti-Semitism, the legacy of the Holocaust and assimilation, the sadness of lost love, the role of the artist and the location of the human soul at the end of a ragged century.
Sight Unseen is the winner of the 1992 OBIE Award for best American play and the Dramatists' Guild/ Hull-Warriner Award, one of the finalists for the 1992 Pulitzer Prize for Drama. Donald Margulies is the author of 15 titles including Brooklyn Boy, Collected Stories, Dinner With Friends, Shipwrecked- An Entertainment, and Time Stands Still. He is the adjunct professor of English and Theater studies at Yale University. He is currently adapting the novel Middlesex by Jeffrey Eugenides for an HBO miniseries.