The Holzwege of
Heidegger and
Finlay
Sacha Golob and
Kathleen McKay
58 Evental Aesthetics
ABSTRACT
On both conceptual and methodological levels, this article explores the relationship between
Martin Heidegger’s philosophy and the work of the poet and visual artist Ian Hamilton Finlay. At
the center of Heidegger’s account of experience is the notion of the clearing or the open, a space
within which and against which entities are “disclosed” or become fully apparent. The purpose of
this text is to examine how Finlay’s work might be seen as a response to this Heideggerian
framework. In particular we look to the poet’s garden Little Sparta, part of which instantiates
Heidegger’s vision of the clearing and of the “Holzwege” or “wood paths” that shape it. We
demonstrate the way in which Little Sparta sustains a distinctive form of aesthetic inquiry, from
our initial state of doubt in the Holzwege thicket to a deeper understanding of the process of
meaning.
KEYWORDS
Martin Heidegger
Ian Hamilton Finlay
Holzwege
Little Sparta
Meaning
Aesthetics
Volume 5 Number 1 (2016)
59
On both conceptual and methodological levels, this article explores the
relationship between the philosophy of Martin Heidegger (1889–1976) and
the work of the poet and visual artist Ian Hamilton Finlay (1925–2006). At
the center of Heidegger’s account of experience is the notion of the clearing
(die Lichtung) or the open (das Offene), a space within which and against
which entities are “disclosed” or become fully apparent. 1,2 Conceptually, this
clearing can be understood as the context in terms of which meaning or
sense accrues and through which we thus encounter the world. Heidegger
often supplements this metaphor with another, that of binding or gathering.
He argues for example that the original definition of λόγος, typically
translated as “word” or “reason,” was a “constant gathering,” a knitting
together of the world around us.3 He combines this with an emphasis on the
ability of physical objects in particular to act as focal points around which
such senses might gather and stabilize – his famous analysis of the jug in
“The Thing” concludes that the “jug’s presencing,” its capacity to exemplify
and tie together a way of life, is this “manifold simple gathering.”4 However,
Heidegger’s discussion of these ideas is marked by repeated warnings about
the dangers inherent in philosophical treatments of them. The fundamental
challenge is to prevent intellectual reflection from distorting or deforming
the tacit experience of meaning which characterizes our lives.5 He therefore
suggests that his own work should be read not as demonstrating some set of
doctrines but rather as pointing back to experience. “One cannot prove these
‘theses’,” he writes, “rather, they must prove themselves in phenomenological
experience itself.”6 Heidegger’s task, as he sees it, is to sustain a mood of
experience that is attentive enough to the structures that form it – avoiding
both the “tranquilized” nature of everyday life and the overly intellectualized
project of much traditional philosophy.7
The purpose of this essay is to examine how Finlay’s work might be
seen as a response to this Heideggerian framework. In particular we look to
the garden Little Sparta, created by the poet at his isolated home in the
Pentland hills, South Lanarkshire.8 This land was formed into a garden for
and crucially by his artworks from 1966 until his death in 2006. Finlay openly
casts part of Little Sparta in terms of Heidegger’s vision of the clearing and of
60 Evental Aesthetics
The Holzwege of Heidegger and Finlay
the “Holzwege” or “wood paths” that shape it: the garden and the objects
within it model the Heideggerian process of encircling, opening, and
gathering. In this sense, at the methodological level, Little Sparta provides a
guiding thread by which one might envisage the type of phenomenological
exploration that Heidegger calls for. Simultaneously, however, discussion of
Finlay’s garden raises the very dangers of which Heidegger warns – how can
one adequately capture in a theoretical discussion the physical act of walking
through the landscape, of moving from one artwork to the next, and of
returning to the first via another path? 9 One option would be to attempt a
conceptual analysis of the distinctive nature of physical experience (for
example, via a discussion of non-conceptual content). But the concern from
a Heideggerian point of view is that the discursive nature of such a project
would automatically skew its conclusions in favor of a misleading
intellectualism. We have therefore adopted an alternative approach. We
will combine a close description of the physical tenor of the garden – the
even pacing of one path and the uncertain nature of the next – with a
structure designed to mirror the cant and topology of the experience.
Instead of operating within the linearity of a proof, this discussion will map
the viewer’s progress through Finlay’s Little Sparta, starting in one woodland,
walking out beyond it, and finding oneself in a second woodland before
returning to the first.
More broadly, the investigation of specific areas of Little Sparta will
show how Finlay’s practice may be read as taking up and elaborating themes
implicit in Heidegger’s thought. For example, Finlay’s work explores violence
and conflict – themes which are largely suppressed in Heidegger’s magnum
opus, Sein und Zeit, and yet which come increasingly to the fore in the
Schwarze Hefte, the recently published notebooks kept by Heidegger from
the 1930s onwards.10 Ultimately this article aims to show how Finlay as an
artist and poet both realizes and responds to Heidegger’s philosophy. In
doing so, the article explores the nature of aesthetic inquiry, tracking the
ways in which an artist might engage, extend, and challenge a philosophical
research program. Given the scope of the discussion, it will not include all of
the standard texts of Heideggerian aesthetics such as “The Origin of the
Work of Art”; rather it focuses on the ideas and passages with which Finlay
directly engages. In line with the methodological considerations noted
above – particularly the concern that philosophical language will “level off”
experience – this discussion requires a range of approaches and is therefore
co-authored by a philosopher and a visual artist.11 The hope is that our
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Sacha Golob and Kathleen McKay
cooperation will allow us to respect Heidegger’s methodological warnings by
moving between straightforwardly assertoric and more phenomenological
or poetic styles. We begin with Finlay’s foundational engagement with
Heidegger – with what one might call the Holzwege plinths (Figure 1).12
Figure 1. By courtesy of the Estate of Ian Hamilton Finlay.
Photo by Kathleen McKay.
62 Evental Aesthetics
The Holzwege of Heidegger and Finlay
An Opening Description
On entering an area of woodland at Little Sparta, it quickly takes a heavy,
Northern Romantic turn and the wood turns to thicket. Such qualities were
described by Finlay as the “Glooms and Solitudes” of the garden.13 Distinct
from other areas of Little Sparta, which are more open to the sky and views of
further land, here the evergreen canopy sets the domain of the wood with
such force that everything beneath appears dark and overwhelmed. It is
with a sense of the trees’ claim to their own place that ways through the
wood are made, quickly subsumed, and ended. Walking there, we come
across various sections of track or path; some are cast, others have been laid
with stone or brick, and some remain earthen. Yet they appear disjointed,
and any certainty of course or footing soon passes.
It is under these same conditions that Heidegger’s prefacing note to
the collection of texts entitled Holzwege (Wood Paths) is made:
Holz lautet ein alter Name für Wald. Im Holz sind
Wege, die meist verwachsen jäh im Unbegangenen
aufhören.
Sie heißen Holzwege.
Jeder verläuft gesondert, aber im selben Wald. Oft
scheint es, als gleiche einer dem anderen. Doch es
scheint nur so.
Holzmacher und Waldhüter kennen die Wege. Sie
wissen, was es heißt, auf einem Holzweg zu sein.14
“Wood” is an old name for forest. In the wood there are paths,
mostly overgrown, that come to an abrupt stop where the wood is untrodden.
They are called “wood paths.”
Each goes its separate way, though within the same forest. It often
appears as if one is identical to another. But it only appears so.
Woodcutters and forest keepers know these paths. They know what it means to
be on a wood path.15
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The darkness of the wood before us is a destitution in which we now find
ourselves. As we move further into the woodland, the darkness increases. So
too does the thicket. Signs and marks become harder to see; things that
would be points of orientation within the impenetrable mass of branches are
covered over in the darkness.
We come upon three identical plinths along the way, each made
from a composite stone. Three inscribed metal plates mounted on top of the
three successive plinths read:
IN THE WOOD
ARE PATHS
WHICH MOSTLY
WIND ALONG
UNTIL THEY END
QUITE SUDDENLY
IN AN
IMPENETRABLE THICKET.
THEY ARE CALLED
WOODPATHS.
OFTEN IT SEEMS
AS THOUGH ONE
WERE LIKE ANOTHER.
YET IT ONLY
SEEMS SO.
64 Evental Aesthetics
The Holzwege of Heidegger and Finlay
Here on a doubtful path – on finding Finlay’s adaption of Heidegger’s note –
we approach an understanding of the poetic economy of the woodland
garden and Finlay’s wider philosophical approach. In the following
paragraphs, we look at Finlay’s work in light of Heidegger’s thoughts on the
role of the poet within the wood’s deep cover and destitution. Starting from
Finlay’s formulation of Heidegger’s lines, we follow the route it offers us into
Heideggerian thought – specifically toward the phenomenology of
“disclosure.” We will find that Finlay’s approach has close ties with
Heidegger’s thinking both with respect to the artwork as a gathering, a point
at which meaning coalesces, and with respect to the model of progress,
charted by Finlay’s garden and by Heidegger’s wood paths, from which this
“gathering” quality arises.
Making Way
The three inscriptions on Finlay’s plinths offer Heidegger’s remarks on
Holzwege as a succession of passages that end without conclusion. The
passage or movement of Heidegger’s text is deliberately re-arranged;
typographically, Finlay pushes the text to the right-hand limit, visually
emphasizing the sense of an ending. Finlay separates Heidegger’s text into
three sequential parts, one for each plinth. The first sets the reader on a way;
the second establishes something, confirming the reader’s way; the third
introduces doubt and offers the possibility of a discovery. The poet
establishes a route sequentially through the text by moving from plinth to
plinth. On first sight, the three equally-spaced plinths set a regular pace and
imply a step-by-step progression. But the inscribed text parts us from that
rhythm: the last passage turns back on the previous two and questions the
way of understanding they established. At this juncture there is something
for the reader to reconsider. The poet leaves us in doubt. Significantly, Finlay
omits the final lines of Heidegger’s text, leaving them to be discovered. This
is what Finlay’s woodland garden will itself come to say to those standing
within: “Woodcutters and forest keepers know these paths. They know what
it means to be on a Holzweg.” 16 We too will come to know the revelation of
these lines. Finlay’s plinths are the point at which we begin to orientate
ourselves to this and revel in the wider course of this thought.
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On making our way through the wood, we will begin to realize the
poetic progress instantiated there. For Heidegger, the open is experienced as
a disclosure, the act of opening up a previously closed space full of meaning.
It is the poet’s task to bring about this clearing, a revelatory disclosure of
being in which the world accords to the person, to the extent that he or she
finds it recast anew. Finlay’s plinths will model this same understanding of
the poet: they will bring the reader into a clearing. Yet within this shared
framework of revelation and disclosure, there are tonal differences, and it is
with these that we need to begin. Heidegger’s post-war work, as has been
widely noted, is marked by a valorization of passivity and an almost
meditative attitude to meaning and the clearing. In contrast, Finlay is often
decisive in acts of clearing, accepting the “command” inherent in the poet’s
advance. Heidegger himself discusses the poet’s venture and the risks
involved in the essay “What are poets for?” 17 The quality of being during
poetic venture, of seeking to rework meaning, is that of being flung loose.
Being on die Wage, Heidegger writes – using an archaic spelling of Waage – is
a balance; one may quickly tip one way or another. Heidegger thus
associates the path or way (Weg and the archaic verb wegen) with the wager
(wagen) and risk involved in the instrument of a balance (die Wage).18 A stone
in the way is a wager around which different routes become weighted. Risk
is incipient in the wind of the Holzwege: “if that which has been flung were to
remain out of danger, it would not have been ventured.”19 For Finlay,
pursuing on the natural track at Stonypath – the wider location for his
creation of Little Sparta – such venture is vital to the poetic task. Growth is
met as if it were itself an advance; trees claim ground, and their canopies
establish dominion, cutting paths short. Finlay’s works there often respond
by marking out a domain that seems at first glance to be a rejoinder to
nature: predominately through the use of classical motifs, the works impose
an order and a sharpness that is not only distinctively human but also
presents itself as a civilizing and rationalizing force. Simultaneously,
however, Finlay recognizes an inherent violence in this human drive to order,
which makes it not so much an alternative to the natural cycle but another
expression of it. Indeed, Finlay stated that “conflict is one of the givens of the
universe. The only way it can ever be tamed or managed or civilized is within
the culture. You cannot pretend that it does not exist.”20 Violence is as much
part of the cultural or political revolutionary cycle as it is of the natural cycle.
Little Sparta enforces this view; when we come across gate piers with hand
grenades as finials, we realize that both the grenade and the more familiar
66 Evental Aesthetics
The Holzwege of Heidegger and Finlay
acorn and pinecone which it mirrors are for Finlay isomorphic points within a
single overarching cycle.21 To take another set of examples, Finlay’s sequence
of works on the subject of Arcadia, involving Arcadia (1973), Et in Arcadia Ego
(1976), and Homage to Poussin (1977), all deploy a Panzer as a central image
and exemplify the poet’s willingness to take on and embed in a natural
context the interlinked risks of conflict and violence.22
Clearing
The task now is to further develop Finlay’s conception of the clearing. We
will see that Finlay’s work while often extremely assertive also contains a
Heideggerian notion of dwelling, which tempers the confrontational
character of the artworks that appear in the garden and gives us a more
coherent impression of Little Sparta as a whole. In the woodland among the
natural declarations of tree post and new leaf are Finlay’s poetic declarations
creating an “intercalary day amid the natural darkness.”23 The poet’s clearing
comes in several forms. First it may be found, as we have seen in the
Holzwege inscriptions, in the form of textual assertion: Classical lettering is
carved on numerous objects, foundation stones, and plaques of wood, metal,
and stone throughout the garden. There is a forcefulness and finality to the
assertions, which are most often quotes, short statements, or single-word
warnings. The initial declaration often clears a direct path between two
concepts or entities so that one can fully reach the other. In Exercise X (1974),
a booklet made with George L. Thomson, Finlay uses two crossing
calligraphic lines to compare the ways in which two paths might meet.24 In
one “X,” an open circular space appears at the point where the two direct
lines make an abiding bind, each bending in accordance with that meeting.
Here two ideas become a joint in thought rather than, as another
demonstrates, strike past one another. As well as modeling this clearing, “X”
is the most immediate mark to hand, used for example to indicate the critical
point of a topography, and also a substitute for that thing that has clearly
struck the mind but which defies further extrapolation beyond that one clear
sign. This “X” therefore brings together several fundamental aspects of the
clearing as presented at Little Sparta. Describing the phenomenology of a
sudden point of poetic concentration and the subsequent attempt to re-
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Sacha Golob and Kathleen McKay
orientate oneself following it, Finlay wrote: “that one word was everything…
it just seems to open onto another possibility completely.”25 Finlay plays here
on the sense in which that clear revelation whilst eluding our discursive
abilities might be opened up by a single word, for which “X” stands. This calls
to mind Heidegger’s 1959 lecture “The Word” on Stefan George’s 1928 poem
of the same title, which describes the poet’s experience of such a word: “they
are words by which what already is and is believed to be is made so concrete
and full of being that it henceforth shines and blooms and thus reigns.” 26 We
will return to this sense of fullness and subsequent reign.
We can now turn to a second example of Finlay’s modeling of the
clearing: concretion of the clearing action and the physical and ideological
way it clears appears in the form of an axe. Finlay placed the object of an axe,
made in 1985, in the Garden Temple of Little Sparta.27 Inscribed on the handle
is the declaration:
HE SPOKE LIKE AN AXE • BARÈRE ON SAINT-JUST
Louis Antoine Léon de Saint-Just (1767–1794) was a central figure in the
French Revolution’s “Reign of Terror.” The incisive impression that SaintJust's speech left on Bertrand Barère is made in turn on Finlay’s axe. SaintJust’s speech cut through doubt in the minds of his audience, creating
connections between disparate drives and visions and thus made things
clear. A later axe made by Finlay in 1987 concisely articulates the essence of
this idea (Figure 2).28 On the head is inscribed “acte” (act), and on the handle
at the point at which one would grip in order to swing the axe is “idée” (idea).
The close-coupled words carved on this one, functional object relate their
inextricably bound purpose as coincident makers of a way. The swiftness of
the clearing axe also relates the suddenness of poetic disclosure brought by
such a word or phrase, as Finlay described, and the permanence of that mark
embedded in the mind.
68 Evental Aesthetics
The Holzwege of Heidegger and Finlay
Figure 2. Photo by John Andrew. Courtesy of the artist.
The violence and clarity represented by Finlay’s axe – an archaic
weapon and deforesting technology – manifest what Heidegger called
“repetition”: a return to the past to identify resources that one might use to
determine the present.29 Here the object, the axe, functions as a tightly
gathered form that inherently retains its cultural position. This upholds a
class of object in the vein of those made by Daedalus – a classification that
was dominant in early Greek thought and which Heidegger echoed in his
description of the object as a gathering point of sense. This type of object – a
daidalon – was asserted wholly, a persistent gathering: a highly wrought
form in which the object’s exterior appearance was consistent with its
inbound purpose. Objects made in this vein could be swiftly and decisively
redeployed by Finlay, their purpose having remained vital. In Finlay’s garden
setting, figures such as Saint-Just make way with these instruments and
tools, cultivating the ground assertively, forcibly even.
Tempering Violence
The initial incisive point of the Saint-Just wood axe widens; a tempered,
more pastoral aspect follows. This occurs first in the axe’s proximity to the
other objects in the Garden Temple. Many have been sanctified there as
instantiations of the actions involved in seasonal turns such as the bee hive
and flower vase. Yet our view of the axe and several scythes in the Garden
Temple may turn color when we realize that they mark words spoken by a
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Sacha Golob and Kathleen McKay
figurehead who was beheaded: Saint-Just’s own death was by guillotine.
Elsewhere, a different functional and seasonal object – a watering can –
weeps for Saint-Just, its inscription recording the date of his birth and death.
It offers solace in the form of rain that breaks the heat of high summer and
thus reminds us that Saint-Just's death was a tipping point in the French
Revolutionary calendar: his execution was part of the Thermidorian
Reaction. The Revolutionary calendar is also deeply governed by turns in
nature's cycle, mirroring the cyclical aspect of Finlay’s understanding of
history discussed above. The break of summer’s peak is declared by a
lightning strike, the force of which heralds rain and the harvest to come.
Indeed, Saint-Just’s execution marked the end of the Reign of Terror: the
extremely violent, most radical phase of the French Revolution and a
watershed moment in the revolutionary process. The lightning strike is a
repeated motif elsewhere in Finlay’s work — for example in the mutation of
a lightning bolt’s shape from the ff of musical force towards the final, violent
force of the Third Reich's SS in a work from the booklet SF (1978)30 and again
in the mutation of the form of a sickle’s blade in the lithograph
Sickle/Lightning Flash (1990).31
Thus the wood axe is used as an instrument with which to forcefully
cut back to the French Revolution, but it also leads to a re-establishment,
prolonging those movements’ spirits and values here in Finlay’s garden,
where they may abide. As we have seen, the manner and spirit of this reestablishment is a re-armament in the case of Saint-Just. From this point on,
following the axe, a revolution of sorts comes about at Stonypath. Finlay
defined his statement of intent in Revolution, n. (1986), a lithograph produced
with Gary Hincks, thus: “REVOLUTION n. a scheme for the improving of a
country; a scheme for realizing the capabilities of a country. A return. A
restoration. A renewal.”32 We have seen how the redeployment of an object
of war and revolution has a necessarily violent point for Finlay from which
new poetic lands are borne and cultivation and civilization unfold. Incised
objects highlight the poet’s cutting advances in pursuit of such a return.
Through concise inscription, Finlay rebinds — or in Heideggerian terms
“repeats” — parts of earlier thought in our contemporary world, cutting
through thicket.
70 Evental Aesthetics
The Holzwege of Heidegger and Finlay
Gathering
Finlay’s engagement with the French Revolution forms one part of what
theorist and fellow Concrete poet Stephen Bann called his “poetic
cosmology”; a complex framework which locates the French Revolution,
German Romanticism, and the Third Reich as developments and mutations
of Greco-Roman values.33 It is to this Classical fulcrum of Finlay’s work that
we will now turn; as will become clear, his practice here links the conception
of the clearing explored above to one of the notions that underlies it in
Heidegger’s own work, that of the Classical object. At Little Sparta, Finlay
seeks to re-affirm aspects of Classical thought – more specifically Classical
values – and their rigorous assertion through action. Thus Finlay not only
selects objects that are Classical, he selects the most longstanding objects of
the Classical world: column, capital, temple, marble bust and stone
inscription. There is a force to many of the clear-cut forms asserted by the
poet, objects dominant and certain of their place. This builds on the notion
of the daidalon introduced above: such objects are a gathering or
concentration of truth; they penetrate the mind intact and established
meaning there. The material density of a longstanding object goes hand in
hand with the sharpness of any inscription thereupon. Hence in Finlay’s
word-bearing object there is twofold clearance: by the clear-cut form of the
object and by the incisive poetic inscription.
The density of Finlay's word-bearing objects is both a function of the
phenomenological instilment of the poetic disclosure, which allows us to
suddenly “see” something, and a function of the extent to which there
develops and dwells an investment of bind, a gathering in the Heideggerian
sense, a coalescence of meaning, which has reached a concretion of form.
Thus density of material and certainty are tied together in direct relation to
the semantic and conceptual binds thereby held. But this sense of the
inbound rigor of such objects is hard to retain, Heidegger warns:
Our thinking has of course long been accustomed to understate [sic] the nature of
the thing. The consequence, in the course of Western thought, has been that the
thing is represented as an unknown X to which perceptible properties are
attached. From this point of view, everything that already belongs to the gathering
nature of this thing does, of course, appear as something that is afterward read
into it. Yet the bridge would never be a mere bridge if it were not a thing.34
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How should we think about Finlay’s plinths without applying a “reading”
after the fact of the artwork? Heidegger continues, offering a useful point:
What the word for space, Raum, Rum, designates is said by its ancient meaning.
Raum means a place cleared or freed for settlement and lodging. A space is
something that has been made room for, something that is cleared and free,
namely within a boundary, Greek peras. A boundary is not that at which
something stops but, as the Greeks recognized, the boundary is that from which
something begins its presencing.35
As in a woodland clearing, so too here in this new clearing created by the
artwork’s presence, disclosure allows being to dwell and become apparent.
In phenomenological terms, the art object forms a boundary – its clearing –
the space within which meaning occurs. Under these metaphysical
conditions, by its very existence, the art object is a gathering: being has an
“incipient power gathering everything to itself, which in this manner releases
every being to its own self.” 36 In the artwork, the thing's own binds, its
capacity to tie strands to the point of coherent unity, subsist there with such
purchase that it has a hard, certain quality. By laying down a Classically
Greek boundary in the sense mapped by Heidegger, a thing is bound to be
fulfilled: the objects of Classical art as he conceived them were points at
which the concretion of meaning occurred, points at which the physical form
of the object was sharp enough to mark a space of understanding. When it
reaches a state of being fully bound, the thing comes to fruition and “reigns.”
Thus fullness is vital.
This restored object’s reign exerts a gravity on its surrounding field,
recasting lines of thought in accordance to the object. Admittance can be
gained by being on the way of or following the “draw” to such a gathering.
Thus it is through the effect of the object on its surrounding domain – not by
“reading into” the object – that we come to know the object more than its
tightly gathered state allows. We come to see that Finlay’s word-bearing
objects are, to paraphrase the poet Edwin Morgan, constructions that hold.37
There is a creation of a new poetic order around such points of anchor, which
harness other cultural fields to our own. Surrounding the artwork, the paths
in Finlay’s garden become deeper and wider, more certain of their way; some
are even laid with stone. Thus it comes to pass that, around the single point
72 Evental Aesthetics
The Holzwege of Heidegger and Finlay
of an artwork, the poet becomes “sure of his word, and just as fully in
command of it.”38
Therefore, Finlay answers Heidegger’s appeal not only in his choice
of objects but also by the manner in which they exist in the garden and
hence by our approach to them, which is also gathering by nature. It is
precisely the poet’s task to create clear opportunities, which will lead us to
dwell intently in the manner described by Heidegger. This is an inevitable
consequence of our innate state of bind; bound here only temporarily, we
“must ever learn to dwell.” 39
What the Woodcutters and Forest Keepers Know
When we come across Finlay’s Holzwege plinths in the woodland garden, we
find this point around which to orientate. From these incisive plinths unfolds
a more gradual wind – a contemplative re-working – as the gravity of the
certain object goes to work on the doubtful thicket surrounding it.
Finlay’s garden and the pull of the word-bearing objects placed there
begin to reveal what Heidegger’s woodcutters and forest keepers know. As
we walk there, the wood paths – disjointed parts of a path in doubt – start to
cohere. The axe in the temple, the objects surrounding it, the longer draws of
Classicism and French Neo-Classicism: these exert draws on our
understanding and recast the wind of paths we develop around the Holzwege
plinths. It starts to make sense that there would be sections of deeply
grooved tank tracks marking one way to the plinths. The woodcutters and
forest keepers know why the wood paths make a certain pattern of
movement apparent on the ground; they have made way there in the wood.
Here is what the woodcutters know: that it is their process of
clearing that governs the paths that draw us into the open. Once we see the
disclosure in the wood clearing, what seemed to be doubtful ways now
manifest the economy of the woodland. The necessary precedence and
violence of the poetic disclosure is realized in Finlay’s axe, after which the
wood paths are deepened in accordance with the newly disclosed open, cut
trees borne along and pulled out along certain lines. Paths, once uncertain,
now deliver the clearing to us. The poet has shown us what it is to be on a
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Holzweg. Thus it comes to be that Finlay’s woodland enacts the poet’s task in
the world as described by Heidegger: the processes of cutting, disclosure,
and establishment of dwelling deliver the revelation promised in the
Holzwege inscription. The artwork establishes a foundation stone that
functions as a joint in thought, allowing a wider field to unfold in accordance
to the object. The cohering operation it performs on the wider garden is not
achieved by introducing some new or external model of unity but rather, as
Heidegger identified, by making visible connections that already belong to
the gathered nature of the object. The poet’s thought there dwells and by
that dwelling gains a deepening hold on the ground, answering Heidegger’s
call “to bring dwelling to the fullness of its nature.”40 We may find this in the
poet’s expanding territory, in the more tightly wrought bent of paths in the
established garden, and in the flattened areas of earth around an artwork,
where approaches gather. It is by poetry’s nature that this progressive
dwelling develops: “poetry that thinks is in truth / the topology of Being.”41
With each persistent mark on wild land, the garden’s poetic scope and
potential territory enlarge. To the forest keeper and poet, the woodland is
now increasingly bound to disclose. Thus the larger artwork of Little Sparta
begins to emerge – and with it Finlay’s conception of being in the world.
Figure 3. By courtesy of the Estate of Ian Hamilton Finlay.
Photo by Kathleen McKay.
74 Evental Aesthetics
The Holzwege of Heidegger and Finlay
Another Way
On a path descending from the peak of Little Sparta, we approach another
patch of woodland, located just beneath the summit of the garden. Finlay
proposes an alternative route though this wood. As if stating a founding
tenet, a plaque is fixed to the first dominant tree establishing this new
territory (Figure 3).42 It reads:
All the noble
sentiments of my heart,
all its most praiseworthy
impulses – I could give them
free rein, in the midst of
this solitary wood.43
The heart and woodland are aligned. This “solitary” wood – alone, a unity – is
tied-off from other parts, is something sole. A concordance begins to take
hold, which increasingly positions both heart and woodland as gatherings:
both are solitary thickets. The dark density of Finlay’s woodlands and the
impossibility of any new opening in the heart’s mass of branching parts align
the two closer still. Resonances between heart and woodland are perhaps
most notably traced to Homer who described the heart as close-textured,
highly bound, or bushy in quality.44 Plato understood that the lungs took on
the impact of the “leaping” heart – cushioning it – their volume thick with
branches.45 Thus the lungs’ many branches and pathways developed in
response to the heart’s one insistently set and highly bound passage. The
bushy nature of the heart was thus thought to map the extent and quality of
its awareness as the seat of consciousness within the body.46 The reign of the
heart within the body becomes palpable as does its curiously involved
autonomy there.
This sense of the heart’s reign may reach a critical point at which it
seems to turn against us; we dwell in the world only to the extent that the
heart allows. The bounds of the heart not only delineate the physical extent
of its bleeding field through the body but also delimits the duration of that
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Sacha Golob and Kathleen McKay
hold. The form of the heart is felt to repeat an inbound rhythm that
sometimes sits like a stranger in the body, throwing its weight about.
This may prompt the poet to revolt. For example, the poet Theodore
Roethke defies the heart and its boasting dominance, describing it as a “knot
of gristle”: old, over-wrought, and assuming.47 He questions the
authoritative position that the heart is said to hold as the primary seat of
being or seat of the first nutritive soul. Here, poetic “free rein” – abundant
and expansive in its course – makes way in defiance of the one ingrained way
of the heart, which goes over the same course again.
After Counter-Revolt, Louvet
Having turned against the idea of the heart as a thicket, we reconsider the
route proposed by Finlay through the wood before us, returning to Finlay’s
plaque and the different area of woodland it introduces. Once inside and in
contrast to the dark Holzwege thicket, this woodland is lighter, full of young,
deciduous trees, yearlings, and in parts has the appearance of a coppice. The
author of the passage quoted on the plaque at Figure 3 is Jean-Baptiste
Louvet de Couvrai (1760–1797), who came to hold a position postThermidorian Reaction. This point in the French Revolution was a revolt
against the extreme violence of the Reign of Terror that led to a turn towards
a non-reactionary, more temperate way, curbing the counter-violence of
figures such as Saint-Just. Here Finlay hints at an alternative course of action
towards insight – towards disclosure – and puts down Saint-Just’s axe.
Finlay’s Louvet plaque establishes a post-Thermidorian Reaction
position both in accordance to the former figures we have explored and in
the form of the woodland’s terrain. We may remember the objects in the
Garden Temple devoted to Saint-Just and the clearing action they were
devoted to and also the watering can dedicated to Saint-Just. After this peak
of terror follows the water’s run: here is Louvet’s landscape. The path
through the wood now before us is downhill, closely following the course of a
stream, tipped from the peak behind us and flowing from a full reservoir
high in the garden. The nature of Louvet’s “rein” is said by the text to be free.
It follows that the water through the Louvet wood makes a gradual passage,
76 Evental Aesthetics
The Holzwege of Heidegger and Finlay
easing its way and pooling. A more intricate relation is wrought between
land and water alongside which our path winds.
Free Rein
We can see that Finlay has built a territory of meaning with a different turn
in nature in the Louvet wood, and when we consider this terrain in
combination with other figures of the French Revolution chosen by the poet,
we recognize a wider topology of being at Little Sparta. Louvet’s passage
though the wood is perhaps comparable to the way in which Heideggerian
meaning is gained; made on the way, its grip on the ground deepens with
being’s inherence in the world. Yet Louvet’s grip is weak. Washed-out and
sentimental in comparison to the clearings created by Saint-Just’s axe,
Louvet’s passage is far more defined by the established extremes of
Revolutionary and counter-Revolutionary positions than by any will of his
own. The way through the Louvet woodland is conciliatory and hardly
creates clearings; rather, the course settles on its way via the least contested
pass, following the course of water. Louvet has free rein only within
uncontested territory.
If cutting and clearing are not active here in the Louvet wood, how
can insight be gained? One option would be to trace the idea of “free rein”
back through Heidegger’s own widely discussed use of “walten,” meaning “to
prevail” or “to let rule.” Heidegger himself uses “walten” to capture the
process of a coming to presence that establishes a context of meaning, which
creates a context in terms of which other objects are understood and so
“reigns.”48 This is precisely the process discovered via the Holzwege plinths in
the first half of this article. There is an implicit violence in the term, a
violence borne out by its cognates such as the deeply ambiguous “Gewalt”;
standardly “violence” but in many contexts something closer to “legitimate
authority.”49 In the contrast between the Holzwege and Louvet woodlands, we
see Finlay working with this type of tension: the freedom that Louvet attains,
his “free rein,” exists only where dominant territories will allow. Again
Finlay’s greater willingness to recognize the interpenetration of “walten” and
“Gewalt” is apparent; the freedom Louvet gains is generated and dominated
by the cyclical process of revolution and the violent assertion of meaning
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Sacha Golob and Kathleen McKay
exemplified by figures such as Saint-Just. Yet there is also an alternative
route that will ultimately bring us back to and further illuminate the idea of
disclosure: the heart’s way.
The Heart and the Thicket
The significance of metaphors based on the heart deepens in Heideggerian
aesthetics, where it must be conceived outside of a purely biological
discourse. Heidegger states: “the widest orbit of beings becomes present in
the heart's inner space.”50 The heart is an open: an auditorium within which
being’s way resounds and is discovered. Thus the heart becomes a device
that, inherently attuned to the throws and pitches of being, will gain insight.
The heart’s hold over the body no longer sounds estranged nor
authoritarian; instead it accurately gauges the way in which we dwell: “the
whole of the world achieves here an equally essential presence in all its
drawings.”51 Recognition of the heart’s involvement ties the artist’s methods
closer still to the Heideggerian instruction that we “must ever learn to
dwell.”52
Curiously, a work by Finlay may have anticipated this connection.
Woodpaths (1990) is a small booklet in which Finlay restates the first two
parts of the Holzwege inscription.53 He adds a last, third passage of his own
making:
“In the wood are paths which
mostly wind along until they end
quite suddenly in an impenetrable
thicket.”
“They are called woodpaths.”
They are paths where the heart and
the foot walk hand in hand.54
78 Evental Aesthetics
The Holzwege of Heidegger and Finlay
For Heidegger, the manner in which being is discovered is grounded in the
explorative disclosure of the world; meaning is made on the way, on and by
the foot at Stonypath. By fixing the Louvet plaque to the first tree, Finlay “recognizes” the heart’s way in the woodland that follows and provides further
ground for this alternative Heideggerian course towards clearing.
Resonance
We have found that a rhythm has built between the heart’s thicket and the
wood’s thicket. One crucial emphasis that arises is on their common
isolation. When pitched together, two distinct unities – wood and heart –
can build a familiarity of meaning. The heart’s thicket and the wood’s thicket
develop, and we become attuned to their common binds – their
concordances – between the two. When the two are set to work together,
meaning that is incipiently gathered within each thing can be realized
outside of its individual bounds.
Between solitary and fixed artworks resonance builds; concordances
between the two things bind them increasingly. As these points coincide,
they coalesce, holding things in relation. Indeed, Finlay made the role of
resonance clear, stating that he thought of poetry “in terms of the resonant
image, and it is precisely this resonance which animates and justifies the
surrounding space.”55 A resonant image gathers meaning towards it. From a
Heideggerian perspective, this idea is fundamentally linked to that of
atmosphere or mood. Heidegger’s preferred term for these – Stimmung – is
deliberately and naturally read as “resonance” or “tuning.”56 In this sense,
Finlay’s remark that “superior gardens are composed of Glooms and
Solitudes and not of plants and trees” captures the Heideggerian process
through which a mood attunes in a certain way, making certain things
apparent.57 Atmosphere does not occlude: it is the air’s pitch turned toward
the persistent object. For Heidegger, therefore, atmosphere is a cultivating
substance in which we are “trans-planted” and in which meaning grows.58
We have found resonance not simply within a single aspect of the
garden terrain but a resonance between two distinct parts: the Holzwege
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Sacha Golob and Kathleen McKay
wood and the Louvet wood. In working together, the woods illuminate
aspects both of the open and of the manner in which meaning is gained: in
turn on the way, strikingly, or resoundingly through concordance.
In Conclusion
By engaging with Finlay’s response to Heidegger, we have demonstrated how
Little Sparta sustains a distinctive form of aesthetic inquiry – from the initial
state of doubt in the Holzwege thicket to a deeper understanding of
meaning’s progress. The works of art located in Finlay’s garden and the form
of garden surrounding them, as exemplified by the interaction of the
Holzwege and Louvet woods, all serve to model the way of meaning traced by
Heidegger. In this sense our study has sought to discover Finlay’s description
of his own work as “a model, of order, even if set in a space which is full of
doubt.”59
80 Evental Aesthetics
The Holzwege of Heidegger and Finlay
Notes
The authors would like to thank two anonymous referees, the journal’s editors, and Andrew
Patrizio for their comments on earlier drafts of this material. We would also like to thank the
carver John Andrew, who kindly supplied the photograph of the axe he made in 1987 in
collaboration with Ian Hamilton Finlay, and Pia Simig and the Little Sparta Trust for
permission to reproduce the relevant images.
1 Martin Heidegger, Being and Time, trans. J. Macquarrie and E. Robinson (New York: Harper
and Row, 1962), 171.
2 As Sheehan observes, Heidegger employs a range of terms for this structure with “Lichtung”
ultimately coming to dominate:
[T]he goal of Being and Time was to identify and explain the openness that makes it
possible to take something as this-or-that … This ‘open space’ went by a series of
cognate and mutually reinforcing terms throughout Heidegger’s career, among
which are Da, Welt, Erschlossenheit, Zeit, Temporalität, Zeit-Raum, Offene, Weite,
Gegend, and Zwischen. In his later work, however, all these terms tended to gather
around Lichtung (Thomas Sheehan, “What, after all, was Heidegger
about?”Continental Philosophy Review 47 (2014): 263).
3 Martin Heidegger, Introduction to Metaphysics, trans. G. Fried and R. Polt (London: Yale
University Press, 2000), 136.
4 Martin Heidegger, Poetry, Language, Thought, trans. A. Hofstadter (New York: Perennial,
2001), 171.
5 Dahlstrom refers to this as the “paradox of thematization.” For discussion, see Daniel
Dahlstrom, Heidegger’s Concept of Truth (London: Cambridge University Press, 2001), 433–4.
6 Martin Heidegger, The Phenomenology of Religious Life, trans. M. Fritsch and J. Gosetti-Ferencei
(Bloomington: Indiana University Press, 2010), 57.
7 Heidegger, Being and Time, 223.
8 Ian Hamilton Finlay and Sue Finlay, Little Sparta, 1966–2006. The title is in part a reference to
the complex role the Classical world plays in the artistic and intellectual space of the
garden; we return to this theme below.
9 We are grateful to an anonymous referee for pressing this point.
10 There is of course an extensive and important debate occurring over the intellectual and
political complicity of the Schwarze Hefte writings in the violence against the Jews and
others during the NS-period, but our concern here is not that but the increased use there of
a violent imagery of domination to frame Heidegger’s own question, the question of the
clearing and of being. See Martin Heidegger, Überlegungen II-VI: Schwarze Hefte 1931–1938
(Frankfurt: Klostermann, 2014), 362.
11 Heidegger, Being and Time, 201.
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12 Ian Hamilton Finlay, Untitled (“Holzwege plinths”), 1990–5, composite stone and bronze, each
plinth 20 x 26 x 91.5 cm, Figure 1. There is not an established date for this work. A printed
work on Holzwege – Finlay’s booklet Woodpaths – was published in 1990, and an exhibition
of his work titled Holzwege was staged at the Neuer Aachener Kunstverein again in 1990. A
different version of the three plaque-plinths quoting the same passage from Heidegger
was installed in 1995 at the Schlosspark, Grevenbroich. It therefore seems likely that the
version at Little Sparta is within or close to the period 1990–5.
13 Ian Hamilton Finlay, “Detached sentences,” in Little Sparta: A Portrait of a Garden, eds. R.
Gillanders and A. Finlay (Edinburgh: Scottish National Portrait Gallery, 1998a), 1.
14 Martin Heidegger, Gesamtausgabe 5: Holzwege (1935–1946) (Frankfurt: Klostermann, 1977),
[no pagination].
15 Martin Heidegger, Off the Beaten Track, trans. J. Young and K. Haynes (London: Cambridge
University Press, 2002), [no pagination].
16 Ibid., [no pagination].
17 Heidegger, Poetry, Language, Thought, 87–139.
18 Ibid., 101.
19 Ibid., 100.
20 Malise Ruthven, “Gardens: Politics of Little Sparta,” Architectural Digest 46, no.7 (1989): 111.
21 See, for example, Ian Hamilton Finlay and David Edwick, Gate Piers, 1991, brick and stone.
22 Ian Hamilton Finlay and George Oliver, Arcadia, 1973, screenprint on paper, 35.5 x 43.7 cm.
Ian Hamilton Finlay and John Andrew, Et in Arcadia Ego, 1976, marble, 28.1 x 28 x 7.6 cm. Ian
Hamilton Finlay and John Borg Manduca, Homage to Poussin, 1977, booklet, 16 pages, 13 x 13
cm.
23 Walter Pater, The Works of Walter Pater, Volume 4: Imaginary Portraits (London: Cambridge
University Press, 2011), 132. This comment is made by Pater on Apollo, who is a recurrent
figure in Finlay’s work. Indeed, Apollo is directly identified with Saint-Just in works such as
the Proposal for a temple of Apollo/Saint-Just (1994). While numerous and close ties can be
made between Saint-Just and Apollo, this would draw our present study too far from its
course. For discussion, see Stephen Bann, “Epilogue: On the homelessness of the image,”
Comparative Criticism: Walter Pater and the Culture of the Fin-de-Siècle 17 (1995): 123–128.
24 Ian Hamilton Finlay and George L. Thomson, Exercise X, 1973, booklet, 24 pages, 9.5 x 14 cm.
25 Ian Hamilton Finlay, “The sail-boat on the pillow,” in Little Sparta: A Portrait of a Garden, eds.
R. Gillanders and A. Finlay (Edinburgh: Scottish National Portrait Gallery, 1998b), 53.
26 Martin Heidegger, On the Way to Language, trans. Peter D. Hertz (New York: Harper and
Row, 1971), 144.
27 Ian Hamilton Finlay, Axe, 1985, wood and iron, 93 x 23 x 7 cm.
28 Ian Hamilton Finlay and John Andrew, Axe, 1987, wood and iron, 93 x 23 x 7 cm, Figure 2.
29 Heidegger, Being and Time, 437.
30 Ian Hamilton Finlay and George L. Thomson, SF (Dunsyre: Wild Hawthorn Press, 1978), [no
pagination].
31 Ian Hamilton Finlay and Gary Hincks, Sickle/Lightning Flash, 1990, lithograph, 29.8 x 46.9 cm.
See items 4.90.13–15 at http://www.ianhamiltonfinlay.com/1990_Prints.html.
32 Ian Hamilton Finlay and Gary Hincks, REVOLUTION, n., 1986, lithograph, 43 x 43 cm.
82 Evental Aesthetics
The Holzwege of Heidegger and Finlay
33 Ian Hamilton Finlay, Ron Costley, and Stephen Bann, Heroic Emblems (Calais: Z Press, 1977),
29.
34 Martin Heidegger, Poetry, Language, Thought, trans. A. Hofstadter (New York: Perennial,
2001), 151. Emphasis original.
35 Ibid., 152. Emphasis original.
36 Ibid., 98.
37 Alec Finlay, ed., Wood Notes Wild (Edinburgh: Polygon, 1995), 7.
38 Martin Heidegger, On the Way to Language, trans. Peter D. Hertz (New York: Harper and
Row, 1971), 145.
39 Heidegger, Poetry, Language, Thought, 159. Emphasis original.
40 Ibid., 159.
41 Ibid., 12.
42 Ian Hamilton Finlay and Andrew Whittle, Tree-plaque, 1991, stone, approximately 40 x 30
cm, Figure 3.
43 Original emphasis.
44 Homer, Iliad (London: William Heinemann, 1928), XVI, 553 f. For further discussion of the
heart and its quality as a thicket, see Richard B. Onians, The Origins of European Thought
(London: Cambridge University Press, 1988), 23–-43.
45 Plato, Timaeus (London: MacMillan, 1888), 70 B ff.
46 Plato, Theaetetus (Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1883), 194 E f. For discussion, see Richard B.
Onians, The Origins of European, 28–9.
47 Theodore Roethke, The Collected Poems of Theodore Roethke (New York: Anchor Books, 1975),
75.
48 Heidegger, Poetry, Language, Thought, 175–7.
49 The inherent ambiguity in the term and the significance of this for Heidegger’s work were
particularly stressed by Derrida in his final seminar series: see for example Jacques Derrida
The Beast and the Sovereign, trans. G. Bennington (Chicago: Chicago University Press, 2009),
279.
50 Heidegger, Poetry, Language, Thought, 125.
51 Ibid., 125. This heart is not essentially biological. The metaphor relates the core
Heideggerian sense in which meaning is gained and drawn equally to being.
52 Heidegger, Poetry, Language, Thought, 159.
53 Ian Hamilton Finlay and Solveig Hill, Woodpaths, 1990, booklet, 14.5 x 8.8 cm.
54 Ian Hamilton Finlay and Solveig Hill, Woodpaths (Dunsyre: Wild Hawthorn Press, 1990), [no
pagination].
55 Ian Hamilton Finlay and Stephen Bann, Midway (London: Wilmington Square Books, 2014),
152. Emphasis original.
56 For example, a Klavierstimmer is a piano tuner.
57 Heidegger, Being and Time, 172–77.
58 Michael Inwood, A Heidegger Dictionary (Oxford: Blackwell, 1999), 131.
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59 Ian Hamilton Finlay, “Letter from Finlay to Pierre Garnier, September 17th, 1963,” Image 10
(1964): 10. Finlay describes the operation of his Concrete poetry in this quote; however it
can be applied more widely to other word-bearing objects such as those at Little Sparta.
The poet’s later work Little Sparta – a work of “avant-gardening” – shares a lineage and logic
with his earlier Concrete poetry. In 1966, Finlay states:
I have become interested also in concrete poetry in relation to architecture and
avant-gardening. This is not a whim, but the logical development of earlier
concrete poetry – from the poem as an object on the page to the poem as an object
properly realized in sandblasted glass, stone or indeed concrete (Ian Hamilton
Finlay, “Autobiographical sketch,” in Ian Hamilton Finlay: Selections, ed. Alec Finlay
(Berkeley: University of California Press, 2012), xx).
84 Evental Aesthetics
The Holzwege of Heidegger and Finlay
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––——. Untitled (“Holzwege plinths”), 1990–5. Composite stone and bronze,
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Volume 5 Number 1 (2016)
85
Sacha Golob and Kathleen McKay
––——, and Solveig Hill. Woodpaths. Dunsyre: Wild Hawthorn Press, 1990.
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––——, and John Borg Manduca. Homage to Poussin, 1977. Booklet, 16 pages,
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––——, and George Oliver. Arcadia, 1973. Screenprint on paper, 35.5 x 43.7 cm.
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