Eisenman, Stephen - Symbolism and The Dialectics of Retreat
Eisenman, Stephen - Symbolism and The Dialectics of Retreat
Eisenman, Stephen - Symbolism and The Dialectics of Retreat
see in the
THROUGHOUT
t:modern
artists
"The
CENTURY,
by continually strengthening
Classical past
present:
NINETEENTH
THE
we have heard
of today
poetic
we
its
epic quality,
Modernism,
it
now
is
possible to state in
summary,
as
it
much
European forms
to
as a radical (and
more or
we were
"All
authority.
a rejection
and imperial
after,"
really
the
Impressionist
if
of older
in general to
this
modern
were
and hierarchies of
painting and
late
Academic descendants. In
its
portraits of workers
physiognomy of
employment of dissonance
Wagnerism
especially
had
among
gained
numerous
interests
and
portraiture
to the
adherents
Paris,
in
journalists
Wagner's
music rep-
and
intellection,
Van Gogh
that
it
offered
him
Crows In
all
his
Van Gogh
in
such
paintings as
final
homage not
so
much
to
of 1888, "so
much
did
Theo in
the
means
made a
summer
Van
their
sensation, emotion,
cultural strategy.
which
Gogh
his
of Van
addition,
The work
traditional
expressed
times. His
and revolutionism of
Gogh
La Berceuse we saw
Van Gogh's
"They
Van
Gogh wrote
"and
to
Theo
in July
extreme loneliness.
to bring
them
to
you
hope you
in Paris as
304
way
will see
for
and
that
hope
save
it,
to express sadness
them soon
you what
almost
cannot say in
of
that
human
is,
to
expression of feeling.
Van Gogh's
and the
project of reconciling
295
312
in the
Wheatfields 1890.
life
difficulty,
his
work
in
artistic
symptom
of a structural
It
crisis.
was an inward-
life
Chavannes
of
art.
At
least
the
(see p. 277)
tradition of representation
American
less
prerogatives of
society
To
modernism were
critical
useless ingenuities
become
in
To them,
as abstract or
a capitalist
art
Elizabeth
Gilmore Holt
"the
as
triumph of art
retreat
Symbolism
it.
four-centuries-old
a fifty-year
historian
European mimetic
tradition,
it
also pioneered a
new
art
of
as
was an
it
or pattern
shown
was adequate
to
is
that
form alone
convey
spiritual
meaning and
Emile Schuffcnecker
in
by doing
like
repeated by
many
Conceived
period
the pre-
nonrepresentation,
to rise
up
to
God
conflict
the
is
was
during
dominant nineteenth-century
more of
Symbolism accelerated
international perspective.
also an
August 1888,
earlier
line, color,
it
was
of
retreat,
generation of Romantics
art
of widespread
the
Societe
I
European
Pre-Raphaelite
Anonyme
ink pendants
ilues,
or
Brotherhood,
the
the
Xcoimprcssionist
Impressionist
Societe
membership
des
lists,
MODI.RMSM
RSI
SYMBOLISM
305
to
any
in
our
art
is
life).
The
aim of
essential
Kahn's
tify
final
temperament).
the subjective
"Symbolism
article called
as
a
diverse array of
maxim of Symbolist
Albert Aurier, in an
critic
in Painting:
under
five
terms:
>
unique ideal
1.
Ideist, for
2.
Symbolist, for
3.
Synthetist, for
its
will
Idea.
it
will
it
will
according to a method
which
under-
generally
is
standable.
4.
313
PALL GAUGUIN
28H92
x 73)
5.
(It
Decorative
consequentially)
is
painting in
its
decorative
for
it
spawned numerous
local
and
at
it, is
once
ideist.
Symbolism became an
French, and
critics,
first
of
all
as a
be recognized by
September
its
rhetoric. In
in
poet
He
in
form which,
sensitive
in itself,
but would be
it
art
can
point of departure."
Kahn penned
upon the
A week later,
a response to
right of poets
Moreas
and
in
which he too
insisted
in a
at
306
to subject
and
world of dream:
RHETORIC OF SYMBOLISM
down
subjective states by
vocabulary of
Yet
if
historical
we wish
means of a
line, tone,
and
Symbolism had
to this
artists,
simple formula:
restrictive
and non-naturalistic
color.
accepted rhetoric,
a generally
agreed upon.
To
less
its
widely
Symbolism was
is
member
Hebrew
form of "Neotraditionism"
and hierarchical
stability.
how
the
As
public
later other
a small
Symbolism was
and
way toward
artist's soul:
of Christ must
live
with
,V4
Paul Gauguin
.ity
Rill
307
315
316
308
ODILON REDON
Ophelia
Among
RHETORIC OF SYMBOLISM
i88g 1888.
Christ,' said
313
is
a truism.
Our
Be
in
To
itself,
the
size
who were
artists
a
at
artist's
Gauguin
close to
During the
Describing
anarchism.
revolutionary
Gauguin (1848-1903)
in 1889,
the
work
of Paul
and harmony:
quite
removed from
it:
he puts into a
him by
reality;
new
order the
he disdains
hierarchic;
and
own
and
dence of
itself.
upper
up
of Picasso and
intent
ideist
middle right
to
background
is
left,
upper right
at
is
Gauguin represented
ary,
By
is
ideological distinctions
interpretations.
of the
Symbolism and
will
will briefly
of an
collision
suggestion
described
the
to
it
is
The
and symbolist
that
lay
in
beyond
Octave Mirbeau
critic
evocativeness of the
in 1891 as
clearly abstract.
subjective
of an alternative reality
assented
antinaturalist
clearly manifest.
results
later.
its
therefore begin
generation
examine the
in
at the time,
third,
was
1891.)
in
its
its
its
compromising
of newsprint on
all
when he
painting
Hindu
reverie,
Gothic imagery,
its
is
scape painting.
Christ
left
and what
largely
pietistic,
reveals
them
to be
Symbolist
all
is
what
is
spirituality
314
is
of Aurier's
During the
boom and
Aven
in
Brittany in September
of three Breton
women
889, the
gathered around
work depicts
a crucified
group
Christ (or
The
in
picture surface.
Brittany, like
France,
thrived.
Agriculture
was
becoming rationalized
and
tourism
rapidly
grew.
The
latter
development
the
touristic
marketing
of
made
Breton
"primitiveness"
IN
BRITT
Wi
it
is
was
that
309
317
318
PAUL GAUGUIN
PAUL GAUGUIN
place.
in
works by
artists
such as
modern expression of
cultural aspiration.
and
to express
what he called
in a letter to
much
of rural
its
is,
modern
industrial capi-
considered below
and Hodler
The
painters
who
further
will
be
spiritual;
310
IN
BRITTANY
and
319
Portrait 1889.
320
PAUL GAUGUIN
1889.
28J-
36J-
in the
Form of a Head,
Self-
Height 7{ (19.3)
Christ in the
Garden of Olives
(73 x 92)
(i
(il
WS
311
modernisms considered
in this
profound
transition.
"Myth
speech."
critic
and
fills it
reality:
it is,
literally, a ceaseless
perhaps an evaporation,
[Its
function
in short, a perceptible
decorative fanfare of
to
is]
absence."
embodied
and tourism
lies
amid the
art of
To
order;"
its at
Wandering Jew,
Garden
the
Form of a Head,
the
himself as
a savior
keep
shall
and
ideal,
pain that
community
artistic
wrote
crushing of an
Vincent
in a letter to
in
is
ideal of establishing a
Schuffenecker (1851
once
principles
1934),
1927).
selflessness with
Van Gogh
In Brittany as in the
at Aries.
to pain
1932),
ideal of
Symbolism consisted
it
reality."
germaine
to
it
a definition
of myth that
societies (those
is
myths
if,
precisely
in fantastic
in "primitive"
Many
contradiction.
contradiction
is
in
1860
in
at the
of Ostend,
age of 89 in
1949.
manage
of
evil."
all
Gauguin's),
In
European
modernity and
but forcibly
June of
that year
Gauguin returned
and soon
after
modern
moved
six
to
to the
months, he
312
Symbolist contemporaries
a
IN
BRITTANY
art
is
Flemish
artists
France, Switzerland,
in
tion
culture.
politics.
shall
fact, a closer
Pont-Aven
known
his life
Much
source
For most of
Long
live
"Long
live the
peasant in
artistic sophistication
and
feeling,
Ensor wrote,
"all the
canons of
art
vomit death
like their
bronze brethren."
For
his
all
his extravagance
artistic
training
and
vitriol,
conventionally
and enrollment
in
1877
at the
later
disparaged the
lessons in Ostend,
Academy
320
'"
fated to be
is
it
7"/,'
Gauguin portrayed
Self-Portrait (1889),
and
318
which the
in
to
889), a picture
317
condemned
inspired by Courbet's
forever
final
him,
fields in
harmonious
art.
art
of
myth
much Symbolist
Gauguin's "synthetist"
it
empty
an historical amnesia.
empties
with nature.
history
say;
and
in
tioning, as
a conservative
Brussels
319
for his
Callot,
complex assimilation of
321
this
is
1st on,
life
in
the
Pouffamatus,
but
apparent
Cracozie,
The
of
Rembrandt,
its
Academy
Baroque
students,
and employ-
(especially
Yet even
the
at
level
of form,
Ensor's
iconoclastic
contour
lines,
works
majority of Ensor's
departure
in
the
scatological
mockery of Northern
Baroque traditions
Renaissance and
its
apparent in
the
decade following
his
is
Tribulations of Saint
hermit Antony
soldiers, frogs
is
and
women and
and demons,
all
and continuing
1881
in
Arbela 1886.
% x 7 (23.7 x
1884 to be:
in
contemporary
his
avant-garde groups
La
to
17.8)
for
Iston,
Persian Physicians Examining the Stools of King Darius after the Battle of
painted
Beginning
JAMES ENSOR
321
more conservative
"The
reality
by the
matters of content as
yet
The
(Les Vingt)
artists,
Formed
a case in point.
and
writers,
critics
in
1883 by
that included
number of
like its
Indcpcndants
to
in
France,
sought
counterpart Les
create
and
exhibit
Salon
juries.
At
first,
the group
embraced
several artistic
commitment
to the
himself go freely in
artist, letting
their goal
socialist direc-
as
form
poet
(the
others),
in
Georges
subsequent group
tendency.
Ensor
initially
stance, but
became
artistic-
He was
especially disturbed
membership
lists
vehicle
by the inclusion
of non-Belgian
for
"pauvre Belgique,"
artists,
others.
the consolidation
as Baudelaire
in
Les Vingt
including Seurat,
a\
ant-garde
and rejuvenation of
had called
it,
in
the face of
November
ENSOR
much
WD
pain wore
I'Ol'l
1.
isw
to see
313
XX
Les
hy
their personality
lopers."
the group; he
who had
isolated
Although
from
adopt
all artistic
exile
rules
even from
official art.
luxury
the
to
Ensor rejected
internationalist perspective,
institutions,
those
of the inter-
Pan-European or
and
and perhaps
of a
small
when he sought
later,
Brussels in
into
d'oeuvre,
is
splenetic
by
a vast (nearly 10
that
affair
cacophonous, and
15 feet),
represents
his
who
is
suspended
is
mounted on
donkey
in
the upper center of the picture; to his right, above the serried
[sic]
left
322
).
21J-X
18$(54x47)
if standing
More
upon which
at
that
on
risers, in
is
mask
or a caricature and
in
making
a virtue of necessity,
he wrote
in
Ensor's
by recourse
to the grotesque
Ensor sought
and the
artistic
legitimacy
which
(1891),
Yet
Ensor sought,
if
even
in the
today
Ostend
prominently
in
is
mood
who were
Ensor pleaded
life
and
and
it:
in his art.
filled
contemporary
314
festivals
fin-de-siecle
to
wooden shoes." In
fact,
Ensor's ideal
community.
presumed
the inspiration,
carnivals
in the
mature works
have attended
he
his other
However carnavalesque
company of
What
marry
times in the
beginning
to
carnival
friend Ernest
manner of Courbet,
in the
young Brussels
festivals that
his
recalls Breugel's
Man
culture in ruins.
of Christ
of a unified,
city
summer
its
knew
first
half of his
life
he lived in
who
sold souvenirs,
some
summer
peuple.
tourists.
artists
of the period
Hodler, Munch,
Ensor witnessed
the collapse of
structured
upon
society
increasingly
natural society in a
rest
in
like the
(but in
common
women
artists too),
Masks
(1889), in
which
his
Ensor targeted
had been
322
By 1879
several
center of radical
a series
progressive
parties
maison du
representing
social-democratic, Marxist, and anarchist factions of socialism had been formed, which in 1885
crucial to the
Belgium, to the
artistic
Commune
and
a coincident strike
general strike on
March
25, followed
by
"Now
task of art
facilitating the
first
it
is
not
he
culture, frequented
radical
author
and
and
literature,
artist Felicien
critic
Eugene
now
the
accomplishment of
of his day.
the
been
Given the
is
time to dip our pens into red ink," wrote Picard in 1886 in
to a
sequence of massive
is
in
an
face too
alike:
historical destiny."
Now,
common
purpose.
is
reflected in his
**
ENSOR
WD
I'OI'l
I.
ISM
315
t^ir
324
JAMES ENSOR
Anseele et Jesus"
323
(later
My
"Vive
la
l\ x 4J (6.9 x 12)
difficult to establish.
slogans,
may
socialist politics.
McGough
artworks remains
an attack upon
tive doctrines,
all
"fanfares doctrinaires"
and upon
all
upon
institutions, either
all
manipula-
governmental
frequently
expressed
disdain
for
bourgeois
society
own
artistic
conforms
intellectualism,
its
vehemence, anti-
Unlike Marxists
first
The
to the impetuosity,
who proposed
was
society, anarchists
voluntarism),
them
anarchists
many
316
body and
soul.
The famous
more than
and purity.
parallel fanaticism
may
stress
upon populism
comedy and
misogyny and
his intransigence,
a voluntarist desire
hammer blows
single-handedly
and
down
the twin
avant-gardist elitism.
In the art and ideas of Ensor are thus found populism and
megalomania
my
and
mie, light,
Animate
follow toward
may
be seen as
all
the
by the
necessary
and
madness by the
much
beginning.
It
he himself admitted, no
real
self-
progeny; his
still-born
and phantasmagoric
in the epic
garb of a pre-
much
as
the bones, shells, and fossils sold in his mother's curio shop,
which were
his
chief motif;
his
the reduction to
mere
which
his
own
produced
failure to achieve
fruit.
such
decay
literal
in the
macabre etching
My
Portrait in 1960
(1888).
issue of
of what
may
Kahn
(or
contemporaneous")
its
origins in
between humans
in nature.
such
painters
as
Claude
and
Nicolas
Poussin
by the
Roman
a Classical
The
Netherlands,
although
its
permitted
it
greater
to
verisimilitude
and contemporaneity
rationality, productivity,
the
a protest against
social
life
industrial
in all
movements
as
325
Arnold Bocklin
'ita
Somnium Breve
M x45(180x
114.5)
and
city
were intensely
dialectical
that
stability
is,
of
326
Arnold Bocklin
Island of the
Dead
SI
MHOl.lS
I.
\\1)S( VPE
PAINTING
317
327
Edvard Munch
47x46H119.4x
328 Christian
Krohg
4QJ-X23J- (103.5x51.4)
the other,
the
this
be gauged.
in
final
eradication in
some
writers
and
artists as
a standard of
an
judgment.
of the
325
Somnium Breve
326
it
in the last
is
Vita
Dead
this
Norwegian
Hamsun:
318
novelist
Knut
11">)
329
Edvard Munch
Knut Hamsun
novels of
and nature
no longer
a basis for a
alternative.
new
fantasy.
reality,
his
in
at
peace
surrender than
manmade
forces.
This
man's imagery of
his
in
is
at least
submission; frustrated
this
man
in
in
the
as
and
in
in
the societal
He could become
find
more pleasure
environment
an extreme form.
became an
perspective, but
in
The
As Lowenthal's remarks
watershed
period
in
indicate,
the
representation
literary
of the
Classical rhetorics
more
The Symbolist
and georgic
such
arl
knew
and
set
.1
Munch
SYMBOLIST LANDS(
(1863
^PE
(
1
H4) began
PAINTING
his
;i
Hamsun
"The
wrote:
(1894),
327
328
sister's
6),
is
memories of
inspired in part by
Girl( 1880-81),
in part
his
by Krohg's Sick
degenerative disease.
By
its
clearly an
by contemporary
critics
its initial
bitterly
condemned
drawing
at
Leon
'oice
by the
six called
among
all
as
if
open and
tensely against
Jealousy (1890),
it,
and
at
Munch
home
my
heart beating
forgotten and
human
womanly
society
is
listory
is
of nature, destiny,
The French
to
clean.
fin-de-siecle
Redon
antagonism
as passive
confirmed Symbolist.
In The
sky was
seemed
it
Munch
exhibition;
329
"The
Frieze of Life,"
Among
Redon
group of
forces. In Ophelia
Munch
depicted
created a
The uniqueness
her chin forward and keeps her hands behind her back; she
is
moonlight
at
a lone
This
paintings:
and
Through them
beyond
it
all
Hamsun
with
seen
much
exhibited
during his
visit to
as a series of decorative
would give
a picture
of
'life,
with
all
its
found
"Have you
to the sea?"
in
ever
Munch
in
1895).
is
artist
the ghostly
of no place
woman
in
Munch's The
(ca.
330
1908),
endowed by
Voice, she
Redon
is
the
flora; like
identified
created a field of
30 x 40 (76.2 x 101.6)
is
know
how
is
which surround
in
330
P.O
it
London
may have
of Redon's
316
Ophelia 1851.
331
331
Oimi.on
Rkdon
1908.-
36J-
1
!
\i
noi. si'
1
1.
\\DS(
\im
I'
\i\ riNG
121
exaltation of colors."
The
is
intensified by orange
complements,
purple and gray-blue adjacents, and the judicious introduction of white or black accents
induces
a feeling
result
the Flowers
and
in
Rcdon's early
noirs ("blacks"),
such as the
late
works
Redon
in color,
my
wrote
nature in
all its
forms;
sources," he
love
it
in the
more than
in the
all
"become a
A
332 ODII.ON RF.DON The Smiling Spider
333
334 ODII.ON
322
REDON
1899.
the
sophisticated
and
is
manmade
represented
idiosyncratic
Russian
forces."
in
works
painter
48|x4i|(i24x
21.5)
by
parallel
in this sur-
106.3)
(64.1
x 50.8)
who included
332
Vrubel embraced
the stance
"mania"
broad
with
impastoed
planes
of color,
packed
anticipating
the
same
artists,
He
generation.
333
who
many
of the
development,
landscape
for
nature
painters,
Monet,
volition, a space
especially the
immersed
The
in a fantastical
and
many
899),
Cyclops. (1905),
Saint Satyre.
pan pipes
earth.
in
The
It
hand
who appears
crescent
moon
rising
to
shape of the creature's horns and wisps of hair and beard; the
cool aqua color of the water at middle right and
in
left is reflected
Whereas
for
in
VrubtTs
Romantic
is
an autochthonous
return to
artists, like
its
native bourn.
light.
in
designed for
apparent
in
works made
at
similar vitalism
is
which the
artist
and
Once
again, Lowenthal's
Whoever
or
is
human growth
Pan
334
social
fundamental has
rational effort.
full
opposed
to the
ness of humans.
It is
human
self-
Such
conception of nature
in
the
work of these
.utisis
sniiioi.isTi.wnsi \n
\i\ ri\(i
323
US
and contemporaneity,
to evade, that
of "universalizing civilization."
and society
moment
that
is
when
The antagonism
of nature
at
the
dialectic conception
trace of the
in history
tion of nature
is,
threatening
nightmare
The Symbolist
and
of alienation
powerlessness.
more compellingly
than
revealed
nowhere
landscapes
the
in
is
of
independent peasantry,
disappearance of an
the
rise
humans and
4),
painting.
In
he
1897,
his
discussed
talents
the
"The Mission
to
essential
of the
Arts in Freiburg.
lis
address repeated
many
whether
Parallelism,
whether
it
it is
used to
is
set off"
produces
a feeling
very high
fir
the
the innumerable
left,
.
trees,
of unity. If
I
go
for a
walk
in a forest
of
Whether those
of the prevailing
new one:
tree-
against a darker background or whether they are silhouetted against a deep blue sky, the
impression of unity,
Hodler's
first
parallel
main
is
more than
Forest
coincided
it
Apprenticed
tourist
in
pictures
life
the
village
of
Thun
in
painter of
Bernese
the
in
the
(1885),
parallelism
painted
came
to
dominate
was only
his art.
decade
before
that
embracing
parallel
bands of blue,
violet,
after
The
a series
all
is
found
in
Hodler's
336
324
Ferdinand Hodler
The Night
\%<>\.
( 1
45frx9'9J (116x299)
region he had
left;
known and
number of mountain
style; the
in a still
more
is
342
the
is
336
landscape
trunks.
Hodler.
The
One (1893
Mbnch and
radically simplified
oil
343
337
(64.5x91.5)
338
washes of gray and blue, while the three summits are precisely
337
at his furthest
Monch With
appears as
a steel-blue
near Grindelwald.
The mountain
still
The
late parallel
conform
to
Van Gogh,
lack
all,
Van Gogh
in his
like the
S\
\l
HOI. 1ST
LANDSCAPE
\1\
TIMi
125
339
paintings of Cezanne,
would seem
latter
included
in
his
paintings
the
all
that
a juxtaposition
of
flux
warm and
through energetic
cool colors,
and
(73 x 92)
they
are
represents an idea.
grouped
Walk
If there
same
in the
is
a public festival,
direction.
around
speaker
who
On other
When we
we do not
all
like
to
is at
The work
same time
reveals
beautiful because
parallelism.
In
If we
Artist,"
Hodler
326
arose from
[of parallelism in
we again
it
the
of art
is
stated:
life,
decorative parallelism.
be
are
find
it
much as a
To represent nature and society by
compositional imperative.
parallels
was
to
PAUL GAUGUIN
Vahine no
or
The
te vi
{Woman
(72.7 x 44.5)
art
substitute
at will the
was,
to characterize an
it
earlier age
festivals,
the
for
in real life;
and Monet's
Voice,
Poplars
lyrical
344
decorative
spoke was only the mirror image of a terror that was equally
omnipresent
artist
in his art;
it is
would argue,
in
Agony (1915)
in the face
of
It is visible as well,
this alienation
and
and he
fright,
IN TAHITI
Gauguin resolved
and move
to
the
in
in
the
(I
(,l
l\
WD S>
\lHOI.IS\l 1\
Mil
345
342
F Htik* v>
343
328
IN TAHITI
Maurice Denis
344
April 1892.
i4fx24
(37.5x61)
345
191
Ferdinand Hodi.er
5.
The
Valentine in
Agony
although since
plans.
want
Madagascar
to
is still
go to Tahiti and
My
returned to Brittany
which you
made
up,
weeks
have modified
my
mind
is
my existence there.
finish
like so
much
down
state of primitiveness
and savagery.
today
there, as
is
believe
cultivate in
myself a
Such
the
a beautiful night
same as
Gauguin sought
my
far
back ... as
far
artistic regression.
To
return to his
go and
own childhood
live
and,
among
in
personal and
indigenes meant to
do
it is.
this night;
Thousands of persons
these people
are doing
abandoning themselves
village,
In Tahiti,
Gauguin
grow up quite
alone. All
in
to sheer
into what
any house,
ready to reciprocate.
.
the\
They
And
do not
kilt
\'wn
mj door
Tahitian
is
(I
GAUGUIN
WD S\
it
never closed;
etc.)
and
\lHOl ISM l\
Mill
329
called savages!
The
keen regret.
Tahitian
soil is
Gauguin depicted
identified as
spectator.
She
and
above
race. ...
should
memory
have your
like to
to learn
violet,
Specter
1892),
whom
he
lies
bedspread printed
Watches Her,
whole
In
gradually disappearing.
is
in
violet, pink,
is
fruit
As
was
and
reality
once
at
profound disappointment
dream-becomc-
to
Gauguin;
he-
and
freedom
sexual
traditional
surrendering
to
cash
example,
340
in
children are
latter
work, three
wooden bowl
with water.
filled
The odd
appear to be
at least
(who
a child's
and native
may
be an
point of view, or
seeing.
women, which
Above and
from
his art
One day
women
were associated
in
Gau-
natural
fecundity
and beneficence,
as
drop
of successive
Teha'amana
in
colonial
and demographic
vahines
Vahine no
te vi
a successful
in
epoch of
and depiction
as
1892),
stockbroker,
"House of Pleasure"
Marquesas
in 1871
Gauguin was
left
Union Generale
Gadd, and
330
vigor:
women), such
(wives,
bank
to Papeete.
saw
[her].
Tehura
had promised to
didn't get
When
home
till
(as
and
critics.
he called his
last
Now,
house
in his
in
the
"amorous harmony"
IN
TAHITI
one
down on
the bed;
she stared up at me, her eyes wide with fear, and she
seemed not
to
know who
moment,
was. For a
too
felt a
seemed
to
me
staring eyes.
it
lovely;
above
all, I
had
ambiguous shapes,
feared to
make
those legendary
The
demons
the slightest
terrified out
move-
of her mind.
picture,
and the
artist's
description of
mind" by
is
it,
appears to be
ruled by emotion
is
go
means of
341
to
a significant
was obliged
and
first
compensating
with the
oiManao
well
as
filled
innocence, so indigenous
the genesis
published in 1897:
Gauguin described
dominated
erners.
"The Tahitians
le
of their character
forest,
is
tupapaus
Gauguin wrote
in
his
young lover
is
Manao
39
Ityx7}
(26.2 x 19.7)
women were
My
insist-
Manao
Irony Exceeds
all
(ca.
a skeleton. Fugit
Amor
Second Circle of
Hell.
As
in the
Dante
as inhabiting
drawing entitled De
Have
dominance
in
his colossal
women
portal, twisting
8),
among
and writhing
in
latter ink
I Cried)
from The
"She
flics
Like
the
paintings
and
prints
contemporaries
of his
veritably cascade
drawings,
women
are
shown
350
from two
347
in lesbian love
his
extremism
(i
\l (,l
in
IN
is at
the
same time an
WD si
\lliOl
[SM IN
as in the
Mini
34 (
>
347
332
AUGUSTE RODIN
IN TAHITI
348
AUGUSTS RODIN
Height
ca. 1890.
349
18x
/to, Messenger
of the Gods
37J- (95.3)
1905.
13 x 1\ (46.4 x 33 x 19.7)
350
AUGUSTE RODIN
15 x
18Jx 7^(38x48x20)
Fugit
Amur
ca.
Iris,
348
appear to permit
one which,
"allows
women
Anne Wagner
has written,
Something of the
believe,
women and
is at
work
in
toward
women
is
than
initially
language
in
his
title,
in
suggested
employing
Gauguin was
in
fact
the French
name
and
their inhabitants to
French
legal
religion
in
Christian
IN TAHITI
333
339
35i
native "superstition" in
title
to assimilation
God)
use of a Tahitian
the colonial
is
any of the
in
argued
in his
who
nightmares,
and
reality.
Gauguin, by contrast,
the
tupapaus
and
secular, wordly, or
human.
334
pigs,
horses,
"conceptual
is
be in almost
among
of his
inevitability
is
Noa Noa
called
is
one
own
separation as a
European from
Polynesian spirituality.
Thus Gauguin's
ally, is
trism.
phenomenon gener-
fit
for its
(or exoticism)
upon the
differences
Gauguin
clearly
engaged
Redon
already cited,
Noa, meaning
To be a Tahitian is to
spirits,
such as
indication,
Le
Indeed, that
IN TAHITI
Gauguin
is
and
am
an egoist.
drawings,
whole
him anymore.
carry with
little
me
world
in
of
."] is
pleasure; of you,
have memories
my mind
also have in
my case to Tahiti,
the image of a
do not dream
not death
death with
.
following this, in
of death,
life
me
its
in life
but
serpent's
upward among
enveloped in a
My
[Redon's "Death:
tail
roots pushing
Europe, that
in death. In
life
it
Irony
my thought:
its
recall a
tissue
celestial
will
be restored for
all
eternity to
harmony."
below.
Here
is
The
Redon conforms
his letter to
in
Eurocentrism
to the reigning
real
Tahitian
On
Mahana
upper
illusionistic,
direction
in the
two
of liberating
color
from
the
slavish
labor
of
new twentieth-century
and Mondrian,
as well
In
Mahana
no atua, as in
many
te miti
We
own
cultural heritage
By
exploitation.
and
it
was potentially
(Silence, or I'n
Be Dejected)
own
life
the
in
Marquesas by protesting
in
support of
on
flag takes
who
and Frater-
no more than
are
tax fodder in
In Gauguin's
Mahana
and
naturalistically
depicted
at
once
in
on pink sand.
To
the
left, a
head resting on hands, legs bent, and toes touching the water;
to the right,
fetal
woman
is
is
is
folded into
framed by
kind of
GAUGl
IN
352
very
would mirror.
of the
it
Besides
registers.
Where Are
criticism
its
antipode to the
in the
as to the
On
immersed
1\
TAHITI
(35
353
353
PAUL GAUGUIN Where Do We Come From? What Are We? Where Are We
value of a
new
is
juxtaposed to non-European
lists
and
was the
destroyed.
of
fall
The
movement,
therefore, as
myth
collective
women
much
Europeans,
less
(a relative
novelty in depictions of
Polynesians),
and possessed of
and
at
times
even
who wrote
realism
is
with
them
against
.
all
wholly
Surrealist author
first
because
it
Andre
has sided
336
unsuccessful),
allied
brigandage
fifty
ness.
Gauguin's
much
higher
art
and
thought,
finally
conceived
level of technological
To
white
affinities
the Surrea-
IN TAHITI
In
common
like
by, and yet accepted (at times even revelled in), his
own
New
Edelstein.
Daniel
Disorder,
c.
New
York, 1978.
Chapter
Adelyn
Breeskin,
Mary
Cassatt:
New
Eakins.
York, 1974.
New
York,
1986.
Modern
msm and
Art, 1985.
Chapter
1989.
with B. S. Shapiro,
Prints.
New
Mary
Cassatt:
The Color
1984): 86-103.
London, 1970.
Jan Hulsker, The Complete Van Gogh: Paintings,
Drawings, Sketches. New York, 1980.
Vincent and Theo Van Gogh: A Dual Biography.
Ann Arbor, MI, 1985.
Japomsme in Art: An International Symposium, ed.
Society for the Study of Japonisme. Tokyo, 1980.
Tsukasa Kodera, "Japan as Primitivistic Utopia: Van
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189-208.
York, 1989.
(December
The Complete Letters of Vincent Van Gogh, Greenwich, CT, and London, 1979.
J.-B. de la Faille, The Works of Vincent Van Gogh: His
Paintings and Drawings. 4 vols., Amsterdam and
Drawings,
14
Elizabeth Johns,
T.
zine
Hayward Gal-
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1982.
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and
MA,
in
London, 1968.
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Essays
12
Dohme
Negations:
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Pick,
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Herbert
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Work
in
Chapter
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1970.
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Mary
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The Art
New
York, 1991.
13
"The Grande-Jatte
a la
at
Susan F.
Rossen.
Albert Boime, "Georges Seurat's
Norma Broude
wood
Un Dimanche
tion.
Henri
Erich
Chartier, Tahiti
John Gage, "The Technique of Seurat. A Reappraisal," The Art Bulletin, 69: 3 (September 1987):
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Anarchist in Fm-de-Siecle Paris. New Haven, CT,
and London, 1988.
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of the Art
(1987): 2
,
The
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oj Princeton
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York:
el
The
al.,
Metropolitan
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of Art;
10: 2
Paris,
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in
New
York, 1993.
Chapter
16
Theodor W. Adorno, "Commitment," in The Essential Frankfurt School Reader, eds. Andrew Arato
New
York,
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John Elderfield, "The World Whole: Color in
Cezanne," Arts Magazine, 52: 8 (April, 1978):
oj
Redon: Biography,
the Noirs of Odilon Redon.
Saint
Imagery.
17.
Temptation
I lis
life
1969.
Theory.
York, I960,
by
liigusle
Rodin
William Rubin
Guggenheim Museum,
Sm ml
Rise ni
the
Stanford, 1985.
1961.
Robert Herbert
York, 1988
el les
New
148 53
Cliffs, 1980.
Cliffs, 1978.
don, 1991.
E. J.
1978.
Institute of Chicago,
Museum
1984.
15
100,"
New
York: Solomon R
1976.
1983.
York:
J. -P.
(ed.),
Museum
Ol
Cezanne:
I'he
/.,;/,
II
o,k
Sartre, Baudelaire.
New
1'iTT
I'M,:
Judith
Wechsler
wood
Sill
(ed
Jiffs,
II
I)
l
l
),
Cezanne
Perspective
'75
HIUI.IOCiR \l'in
367