Nochlin Linda The Body in Pieces The Fragment As A Metaphor of Modernity 1994 PDF
Nochlin Linda The Body in Pieces The Fragment As A Metaphor of Modernity 1994 PDF
Nochlin Linda The Body in Pieces The Fragment As A Metaphor of Modernity 1994 PDF
T H I S IS T H E T W E N T Y / S I X T H OF T H E
W H I C H A R E G I V E N A N N U A L L Y E A C H S P R I N G ON
SUBJECTS R E F L E C T I N G T H E I N T E R E S T S OF
THE FOUNDER
OF T H A M E S A N D H U D S O N
THE DIRECTORS
OF TH AM ES A N D H U D S O N
W I S H TO E X P R E S S THEIR GRATITUDE
TO TH E T R U S T E E S OF
THESE LECTURES
T H E BODY IN P I E C E S
T H E F R A G M E N T AS
A M E T A P H O R OF M O D E R N I T Y
LINDA N O CH LIN
THAMES A ND H U D SO N
Any copy of this book issued by the publisher as a paperback is sold subject to the
condition that it shall not by way of trade or otherwise be lent, resold, hired out or
otherwise circulated without the publisher’s prior consent in any form of binding or
cover other than that in which it is published and without a similar condition
including these words being imposed on a subsequent purchaser.
First published in the United States of America in 1995 by Thames and Hudson Inc.,
S00 Fifth Avenue, New York, New York 10110
isbn 0^500^55027^1
7
by comparison with the fragmented grandeur o f the past, lacking.1 His
little feet, almost feminine in their daintiness, seem hardly capable of
bearing his weight; his hands, far from wielding authority, shield and
grope. His body, if not specifically weak, has a larva/•like tubularity, and
a torso disempowered by grief and delicacy o f tonal contrast.
The artist is not merely ‘overwhelmed’ but is in mourning, mourning
a terrible loss, a lost state o f felicity and totality which must now
inevitably be displaced into the past or the future: nostalgia or Utopia are
the alternatives offered by Fuseli’s image, ten years before the outbreak o f
the French Revolution.
A n d yet the loss o f the whole is more than tragedy. Out o f this loss is
constructed the Modern itself. In a certain sense, Fuseli has constructed
a distinctively modern view ofantiquity^as/loss - a view, a ‘crop’, that will
constitute the essence o f representational modernism.
It is the French Revolution, the transformative event that ushered in
the modern period, which constituted the fragment as a positive rather
than a negative trope. The fragment, for the Revolution and its artists,
rather than symbolizing nostalgia for the past, enacts the deliberate
destruction o f that past, or, at least, a pulverization o f what were per^
ceived to be its repressive traditions. Both outright vandalism and what
one might think o f as a recycling o f the vandalized fragments o f the past
for allegorical purposes functioned as Revolutionary strategies.
2 Fragment o f a
foot o f an equestrian
statue o f Louis
XIV, c. 1 699-
8
3 Jacques Bertaux, Destruction o f the Equestrian Statue o f Louis X I V , 1792.
9
Another was David’s projected statue o f Hercules, a colossus dedicated
to the glory o f the French people, which was to overcome symbolically
the ‘double tyranny o f kings and priests’ by standing on a base
constructed from the debris o f the statues o f kings wrested from the
porticoes o f Notre Darned
Put in its simplest terms, the omnipresence o f the fragment — in a
variety o f forms and with a wide range o f possible significance —in the
visual representation o f the French Revolution had something to do with
the fact that ‘the French Revolution was caught in the throes o f
destroying one civilization before creating a new one’.5 Yet the actual
task facing those who sought to carry out the Revolutionary mandate was
far from simple. If David maintained that the Revolution must begin by
‘effacing from our chronology so many centuries o f error’, it nevertheless
remained to be decided exactly what the ‘errors’ were, and how they were
to be effaced. The notion o f ‘vandalism’ — wanton destruction o f
culturally valuable objects by the uninstructed popular will — arose
almost simultaneously with the notion o f conservation: officially sane/
tioned saving o f the nation’s cultural patrimony. Little by little, in the
name o f a higher good, the people were deprived o f the right to destroy
the icons o f feudalism.6 Nevertheless, the imagery - and the enactment
- o f destruction, dismemberment and fragmentation remained powerful
elements o f Revolutionary ideology at least until the fall o f Robespierre
in 1794 and even after.
10
M A T IE tt* A R K F l.B l T IO N F O l'R L K S JON C .I.F.rR S COCROXNKRS.
4 Villeneuve,
Matiere a reflection pour
les jongleurs couronnees
(Foodfor Thoughtfor
Crowned Charlatans),
1793-
ii
I
12
the words o f Daniel Arasse, ‘The Revolution founded its own legitimacy
and its own sanctity (sacralite ) on the sacredness (sacralisation ) o f the pcr-
sonage (persom e) o f the king; it turned this to its profit and established the
one by abolishing the other. . . The blade o f the guillotine functioned as
the instrument o f an expiatory sacrifice.’11 Even more naturalistic,
ostensibly eye-witness accounts o f the guillotining o f upper-class victims
were often enriched by allegorical addenda. In a pen-and-wash drawing
o f a multiple execution o f aristocrats by a Swedish admirer o f the 6
Republic, Carl August Ehrensvard, a nude, club-wielding Hercules,
emblem o f the power o f the people, occupies the foreground.
13
The poles o f the figuration o f the body in pieces as an exemplary
Revolutionary trope are represented by two, rather startling, images. The
7 first, an anonymous canvas, embodies the notion o f fragmentation as
sacrifice. It is an odd little painting, awkward, silly, horrifying and
moving all at once, representing a hero so devoted to the welfare o f the
nation that he has literally, in a modernized exemplum virtutis, given his
right arm for it in battle. The arm itself, painted with a high degree of
naturalism, is displayed prominently on an altardike table in the fore/
ground, tenderly wrapped in white linen; in its macabre isolation, it
looks back to the holy relics o f saints, and, at the same time, forward to
the entirely secular still lifes o f fragmented limbs created by Gericault
early in the nineteenth century, or even to Van G ogh’s Self/portraits with
Bandaged Ear later on.
14
8 James Gillray, U n P etit Souper a la Parisienne, or, A Family o f S an s'C u lotts Refreshing
after the Fatigues o f the D a y , 1792.
\
15
9 Theodore Gericault,
The Wounded Cuirassier,
1814.
16
I
io Theodore Gericault,
I Execution in Italy, 1816.
n Theodore
Gericault, T he Sw iss
G uard at the Louvre,
1819.
12 Theodore Gericault, Wounded Soldiers in a C a rt, c. 1818.
18
In Gericault’s paintings o f anatomical fragments —severed arms and 13, 14
legs, in this case —the coherence o f the body is totally shattered. The dis'
persed fragments are then reconjoined at the will o f the artist in arrange^
ments both horrific and elegant, dramatically isolated by shadow, their
sensual veracity both as individual elements and as aesthetic construction
intensified by what seems like candlelight spotlighting. The mood of
these works shockingly combines the objectivity o f science — the cool,
clinical observation o f the dissecting table — with the paroxysm o f
romantic melodrama.
13 Theodore Gericault,
Severed Lim bs, 1818.
14 Theodore Gericault,
Severed Lim bs, c. 1819.
15 Theodore
Gericault, Head
o f a D ead M an,
c. 1818-19.
16 Theodore
Gericault,
Severed Heads,
1818.
20
conjoining a male and a female head (a conjunction usually associated 16
with the erotic rather than the mortuary mode and here further ironized
by the pretty shawl effect for the woman), the other representing a single 15
male head, the subjects are deployed on a horizontal surface rather than
being displayed on the vertical plane. A s Rosalind Krauss has suggested
in her 1993 study o f the contemporary artist Cindy Sherman, borrowing
the term from Gestalt psychology, ‘the plane of verticality is the plane of
Pregncm z . . . the hanging together or coherence o f form.. . . Further, this
vertical dimension, in being the axis o f form, is also the axis o f beauty.’15
The plane o f the horizontal is desublimatory, associated with ‘base mat/
erialism’.14 By laying them out, in perspective, on a horizontal surface.
21
17 D om inique Vivant
D enon, Severed Head o f
Robespierre, 1794.
18 CharleS'Emile Callande
de C hatnpm artin, A fte r
D eath, Head o f a Dead M an,
1818-19.
Gericault consigns the mutilated heads to the realm o f the object, plays
their erstwhile role as the most significant part o f the human body against
their present condition as lifeless, gruesome fragments, deployed on a
tabletop like meat on a butcher’s counter or specimens on a dissecting
table. Yet, even more disturbingly, the heads have been arranged for
maximum effect by the controlling artist: Gericault’s project here is an
aesthetic one, involving formal intervention.
The unique innovation o f recourse to the horizontal can better be
understood if Gericault’s severed head pictures are compared with even
17 such a veracious, on the spot drawing as Vivant Denon’s pencil
recording o f the head o f Robespierre held up by the executioner’s hand,
which has a kind o f iconic dignity, the aura o f subjecthood supplied by
its vertical, upright position; or with a painting, until recently attributed
22
to Gericault but now given to his close friend and disciple, Callande de 18
Champmartin, which is afforded a kind o f decorative self-assertiveness
because o f the perky upright parallelism o f head with the vertical
backplane —an effect utterly foreign to Gericault’s formal inscription of
the most chilling debasement o f the human fragment.
So far, I have been dealing quite literally with the body in pieces, the frag/
mented body and its variable significations in the visual representation o f
the modern period. But what o f the larger implications o f the topic, what
o f that sense o f social, psychological, even metaphysical fragmentation
that so seems to mark modern experience — a loss o f wholeness, a
shattering o f connection, a destruction or disintegration of permanent
23
value that is so universally felt in the nineteenth century as to be often
identified with modernity itself’
A ll fixed, fast/frozen relations, with their train o f ancient and vener/
able prejudices and opinions, are swept away, all new/formed ones
become antiquated before they can ossify. A ll that is solid melts into air,
all that is holy is profaned and men at last are forced to face . . . the real
conditions o f their lives and their relations with their fellow men.’15 This
is Karl Marx, in the Comm unist Manifesto, speaking at mid/century o f the
dynamic destructiveness and self disintegration inherent in the capitalist
system and bourgeois society more generally. ‘By “modernity” I mean the
ephemeral, the contingent, the half o f art whose other half is the eternal
and the immutable.’16 This is Baudelaire, in ‘The Painter o f Modern
Life’, speaking o f Modern Beauty, and suggesting that the painter of
modern life is one who concentrates his energy on its fashions, its morals,
its emotions, on ‘the passing moment and all the suggestions o f eternity
that it contains’.17 H e who would be the ‘peintre de la vie moderne’ —'
urban, Parisian and o f course masculine —must dissolve himself in the
urban crowd, setting ‘up his house in the heart o f the multitude, amid
the ebb and flow o f motion, in the midst o f the fugitive and the infinite.’18
Marshall Berman, in a chapter on Baudelaire subtitled ‘Modernism in
the Streets’, maintains that it is crucial to note Baudelaire’s use o f
concepts o f fluidity — ‘floating existences’ and gaseousness (which
‘envelops and soaks us like an atmosphere’) as symbols for the distinctive
quality o f modern life and stresses the fact that fluidity and vaporousness
would become primary qualities in the selfconsciously modernist
painting —as well as music and literature —that would emerge later in
the century.19
The Impressionist painters o f the 1870s hardly needed to learn about
modernity and the modern city from Marx or even Baudelaire: and,
certainly, the fluidity and vaporousness, the disintegrative structure and
open brushwork they developed to accommodate to the urban body in
pieces in their cityscapes rise from different roots and sources, including,
o f course, that primary source o f modern visual culture, photography.20
But their paintings o f the urban, specifically Parisian, vista share with
24
Marx and Baudelaire a sense o f that loss of solidity, a compensatory
dynamism and flow, a sometimes centrifugal and often random
organization and, above all, the notion that fragmentariness, in the
broadest sense of that term —including both the cut-off view of the body
and the cropped picture^surface —is a quality shared in the modern city
by both the perceivenconstructor and the object of perception.
19 Edgar Degas, Ludovic Lepic and Daughters in the Place de la Concorde, m id 'i 870s.
25
20 Gustave Caillebotte, L e Pont i t I ’Europe, 1876.
26
2 i C laude Monet, Gare Sain t'L a za re, 1877.
30 !
more literal and yet a more complex role in the construction o f modern-
ity and pictorial modernism —and that was Edouard Manet. Cropped
compositions, compositions with fragmented figures, appear in Manet’s
work throughout his career and constitute a major characteristic o f his
style.
Quite early, in 1862, in M usic at the Tuileries, a scene o f modern urban 26
life par excellence, he slices off part o f his own figure at the left margin. In
The O ld Musician o f the same year, he cuts off half o f the figure o f the old 27
Jew with the right-hand margin.
31
28 Edouard Manet, Portrait o f Z ola, 1868.
32
29 Edouard Manet, Portrait o f Z ola, 1868 (detail).
33
30 Edouard M anet, 31 Edouard Manet, T h e Beer'
N ana, 1877. Server, 1878-79.
34
32 E d o u a rd M anet, A B a r
a t the Folies'Bergere, 1882.
3 3 E d o u a rd M an et, A B a r
a t the F olies'B ergere, 1882
(detail).
35
s
of pleasure reflected in the mirror behind her, a world into which the
greemshod feet, swinging for an incandescent moment above the
luminous globe, like a slightly off-centre Fortuna above the orb of the
world, seem to distil the transitoriness o f modern pleasure itself.
There is one painting by Manet in which all the complex, and often
contradictory, significations of the crop, the cut, and the fragmented
figure in relation to the representation of modernity and the construction
34 of modernism as a style are laid out in all their aspects: M asked B all at the
O pera, rejected for the Salon o f 1874.25 Here, we are confronted not only
with a crowd of Parisian memoPthe^world, and dominoed and
costumed women, but also with, at the left, half a Punchinello, and, at
36
the top, a female torso, a female leg and a sash hanging over the balcony.
To paraphrase the painter’s friend Mallarme, who perfectly grasped the
unusual coincidence o f the casual and the deliberate in Manet’s pictorial
vision, the artist has here discovered a new ‘manner o f cutting down
pictures’ so that the frame has ‘all the charm o f a merely fanciful
boundary, such as the view I would see if I framed my eyes with my hand
at any given moment’A Manet’s B all and Mallarme’s comment deserve
further analysis in relation to the theme o f the body in pieces or the frag--
ment as a metaphor o f modernity. The analysis will be broken down into
several oppositional alternatives.
First of all, I must oppose the significance o f the cutting or cropping
o f the pictorial space itself to that o f the fragmented bodies created by such
cropping. Turning first to an examination o f the cut-off view, the
cropped picture surface in the B all, I realize that it may itself suggest two
opposing interpretations:
a. Total contingency: A n equivalent of the meaningless flow of
modern reality itself, a casual reality which has no narrative beginning,
middle or end (Mallarme’s ‘view I would see if I framed my eyes with
my hand at any given moment’). This is a structure associated with
aspects of nineteenth/century realism in art and literature, and with the
new medium o f photography as well.25 Photography was often thought
to be particularly ‘artless’ and, by the same token, particularly associated
with reality, because of its tendency simply to record the raw data of visual
experience, whatever happened to be caught by the lens at a particular
time, whether or not a unified composition resulted, and whether or not
human figures were oddly dissected by the photographic frame.
b. Total determination: The image is understood to be cropped, cut
off, deliberately, as a function of the artist’s will and aesthetic decision.
The cut or the crop must be read as a strategy of that ‘laying bare of the
device’ central to modernist creation. I am forced to pay attention to the
formal organization o f the picture surface, which becomes the realm of
the pictorial signifier, not a simulacrum of reality, however modern.
c. A third alternative: I will read the cropped borders as a kind of
designation of image^making as play, play with habitual boundaries of
37
35 Edouard Manet, M asked Ball at the Opera, 1873 (detail).
38
comparing two sets of male legs - those of a radical and a conservative 40
painting jury - does not. Rather, it is telling difference in details
indicating social position that is at stake in the leg/work in the latter case.-6
Secondly, the fragmented legs can function metonymically, as syiv
ecdoches or part images o f the body as a whole, references to the sexual
attractiveness o f the invisible owner or to the availability o f still more
39 C h am , Opera B all, in
‘Le Bal M usard’ from L es
Physiologies parisiennes, c. 1840.
39
appetizing female bodies beyond the boundaries o f the painting. Such
m etonymies were the stock/imtrade o f ‘lo w ’ or ‘popular’ artists, cartoon^
ists especially, for w hom playing with the signifiers was part o f the
humorous or suggestive vocabulary o f their enterprise to a degree not
open to serious high artists. This is apparent in the work o f both Disderi
and Renouard discussed above. M etonymic references to legs even closer
in spirit to those in M anet’s M asked B a ll at the O pera are apparent in
41 caricatures like those from Gavarni’s series L e s Dehardeurs, o f 1840, where
the m otif o f the slung thigh and the dangling leg function iconography
ically as signs o f an unseemly casualness. T he female legs clad in the
provocative travesti costume o f the dehardeurs or longshoremen, a get-up
popular among the young women who attended such occasions, are
extremely close to Manet’s invention in the B all. Modernism, as Tom
40
Crow has pointed out, has consistently renewed itself with the devices
and strategies particular to popular or ‘low ’ art since the mid/nmeteenth
century, and continues to do so right up to the present day.27
Finally, these fragmented legs function as signboards advertising
commodities, touting the erotic wares on offer at the Opera ball, rather
like the clock hanging outside the clockmaker’s shop or the shoe outside
the cobbler’s. To borrow the words of Meier/Graefe, who loved the
picture and recognized its importance, the motif marks the theme of the
painting as a Fleischborse or fleshmarket.28 O n a more mundane level, it
must be remarked that nineteenth/century advertising was itself replete
with such partdmages. Richly shod feet, not unlike those recorded by
Manet in his drawings, appear in L a M ode illustree in January 1887; corset
covers and bustles make their appearance in Le Moniteur de la mode of
February 1884; isolated sleeves are objects of delectation in the pages of
the same journal on 17 May 1884, and hats, with or without charming
heads to show them off, were omnipresent in the fashion journals of the
time. Men might derive fetishistic sexual satisfaction from the part/
images on offer; women might see them as fashion hints and study them,
even desire them, in quite different ways. O ne can well imagine some
Emma Bovary o f the provinces poring over the images of such fashion/
able feet or such effective corsets with a narcissistic avidity quite foreign
to the usual definitions o f fetishism.29
Like Manet, Degas resorts to the cut/off view, the crop and the frag/
mented figure in his representations o f scenes o f recreation in the great 43,44
city. He, too, turns to the adventurous precedent set by low art - in this
instance, the caricatures o f Daumier - to establish the difference 42
between, as it were, two levels o f modern reality: the workaday world of
the orchestra and the light/dissolved make/believe o f the stage. Yet Degas
puts this trope o f opposition to more serious use. The world o f reality,
which wc share with the members o f the orchestra, is the site o f a group
portrait of serious male professionals, dully clad but individualized as 43
physiognomic types and as musicians. The world o f the women per/
formers - their forms diaphanous, illusory, thinned out by stage light -
4i
r ig h t : 42 H onore D aum ier, Orchestra
during a Performance o f a Tragedy, 1852.
43
45 Edgar Degas, A t the Ballet:
Woman with the Fan , 1883—85.
I
artist, that holds the elements together. It is precisely the social and
psychological distance between the dancer on stage and the elegant
spectator in the box that is at once elided and at the same time evoked by
j the formal echoing of the semi-circular shapes that bind them in
fortuitous connection. This refusal o f conventional psychological
connection, of traditional narrative, constitutes for us an essential part of
Degas’ modernity, his making it new. His modernism depends on this
I making strange of human relatedness. What else is this insistence on
‘meaningless’ but formally eloquent conjunction as the norm for the
pictorial construction of contemporary social existence? A t its most
extreme, the Degas cut-off view may suggest that, like the ballet per-
> formance, the pictorial representation is nothing but convention, and
just as the dance performance ends with the falling curtain, representa- 47
tion ends with an encroaching plane of colour, the erstwhile realism of
the scene transformed into pure abstraction by the end of the act: a
, painted canvas divided into a lighter and a darker rectangle, a sort of
Mark Rothko before the fact.
Not the open and mobile world o f the modern city but the closed and
sheltered one o f the artist’s studio serves as the site o f the body in pieces
48, 52 in two rather unusual still lifes by Van Gogh and Cezanne respectively.
The fragmented bodies in question are not those o f the inhabitants o f the
48 Vincent van G ogh, S till L ife with a Rose, Two Books and a Plaster C a st o f a Female
Torso, 1887.
46
modern city, but o f ancient, or at least older, statues, recalling in this
respect the pathos o f Fuseli’s image. But this sense o f pathos vanishes
when it becomes apparent that it is not really fragments o f antiquity
which are at issue, but familiar studio props, headless or armless plaster
casts rather than the genuine article. For many advanced artists of the
nineteenth century such casts were reminders not so much o f vanished
glory as o f a repressive academic education which they were all too ready
to forget.
Indeed, in his youth, Van Gogh copied from the plaster cast, but it 49
was faute de mieux. H e complained that at the Antwerp Academy they
rarely had an actual female nude to pose, and he seems to have left the
place ‘in disgrace for having painted a copy of the Venus de Milo with
the big hips o f a Flemish matron’.!I In S till Life with a Rose, Two Books and 48
a Plaster C a st o f a Female Torso, from the autumn o f 1887, his attitude to
the headless torso is less clear. The image is a complex one which centres
on several sets of deeply felt tensions - between art and nature; words and
47
images; tradition and modernity - and the strong current o f the erotic
running beneath all these oppositions. Propped up within, or against a
diagonally sliding backdrop o f vibrant if muted yellow, the spiralling
torso, seen from above, breast and belly thrust out, contrasts starkly in its
verticality and its whiteness with the brightly coloured French novels
sprawled at it base. The choice o f novels is significant: both Edmond de
Goncourt’s Germinie Lacerteux and Guy dc Maupassant’s B e l'A m i are
engaged with sexuality at its most abject and destructive. Perhaps Van
Gogh wished to contrast the dubious authority o f tradition embodied by
the fragmented torso with the more vivid authenticity o f the modern
experience represented by the French novel, much as he had in his S till
50 Life with O pen Bible, Extinguished Candle and Z o la ’s ‘J oie de Vivre two
years earlier, where both the Bible and contemporary literary works had
served in a similar capacity. But not quite. A woman’s torso cannot help
but signify differently from the family Bible: its ambiguous sexual
48
50 Vincent van G ogh, S till Life
with O pen Bible, Extinguished Candle
and Z o la ’s ‘J oie de Vivre’, 1885.
49
52 Paul Cezanne, S till L ife with Plaster C upid, c. 1895.
50
, -J
Si
J4, SS Paul C ezanne, drawings after L ’Ecorche, c. 1875—86.
5-2
cutting and cropping play a significant and even disturbing role, so do
joining and suturing —of the most unexpected and daring kind: the way,
for instance, the large onion on the left joins up with, even grows into,
the fragmented still-life-within-the-still-life on the left, and the way that
still life reciprocates by pouring its blue drapery down onto the ‘real’
table in the foreground, or the way the feathery sprout of the right-hand
onion draws the luminous space o f the empty floor up into its vital ambi
ence. H ow truly this is a painting about art, about its objects and its pro
cesses - art conceived of as a joining up of unrelated fragments in a
pictorial totality where the very arbitrariness o f the cuts and joints
emphasizes the artfulness o f the project as a whole — a project which
includes figures o f both love and suffering.*
We can now begin to see that it is by no means possible to assert that
modernity may only be associated with, or suggested by, a metaphoric or
actual fragmentation. O n the contrary, paradoxically, or dialectically,
modern artists have moved toward its opposite, with a will to totalization
embodied in the notion o f the Gesamtkunstwerk, the struggle to overcome
the disintegrative effects — social, psychic, political — inscribed in
modern, particularly modern urban, experience, by hypostatizing them
within a higher unity. O ne might, from this point o f view, maintain that
modernity is indeed marked by the will toward totalization as much as it
is metaphorized by the fragment.35
53
56 C indy Sherman,
Untitled # 2 5 0 , 1992.
57 R obert Mapplethorpe,
M an in Polyester S uit, 1980.
54
effected in the seductive, and fragmented, photographs o f Robert 57
M applethorpe. T h e postm odern body, from the vantage-point o f these
artists and m any others, is conceived o f uniquely as the ‘body-in-pieces’:
the very notion o f a unified, unam biguously gendered subject is rendered
suspect by their work.
A n d , lest w e forget the images we began with — Fuseli’s A r tis t
O v e rw h e lm e d by the G ran deu r o f A n tiq u e R u in s or the monarchal fragments
disassem bled by the French Revolutionaries — two near-contemporary
postscripts may serve to remind us o f the signifying power o f the frag
ment: on the one hand, an anonym ous photograph o f the sculptor
Jeanclos next to the colossal hand o f Constantine on the Capitol, an 58
58 A n o n y m o u s ,
The Sculptor Jeanclos
in front o f the H and o f
Constantine at the
Capitol, 1983.
55
image which reminds us that the artist may be decidedly underwhelmed
by the antique fragment in question;38 and on the other, an installation
59 view o f Kryzsztof Bednarski’s Total Portrait o f M arx, o f 1978, which rein/
states the topos o f the severed head o f the leader as a potent metaphor of
revolution, or would/be revolution, and which has a particular
significance today.39
I do not wish to propose here some grandiose, all/encompassing
‘theory o f the fragment in relation to the concept o f modernity’. That
would go against the grain o f my project. O n the contrary, what I
propose is that in examining, in a roughly historical order, a series of
separate, though sometimes related, cases o f the body in pieces, a
paradigm is constructed o f the subject under consideration. I firmly
believe that the fragment in visual representation must be treated as a
series o f discrete, ungeneralizable situations. Were I to attempt to
construct a general theory o f the fragment, however, I would be sure to
establish it on a model o f difference rather than attempt to construct a
unified field o f discourse. For example, I would insist on differentiating
the fragment in its ritualistic or psychosexual manifestations —as sacrifice
or fetish —from its rhetorical role as metonymy or synecdoche in the work
o f realist artists. Above all, I would feel obliged to dissect or even
deconstruct the very concept o f modernity —itself a constantly changing
discursive formation in which the trope o f fragmentation plays a shifty
and ever/shifting role —with as much care as I lavished on the fragment
itself. But that would be another undertaking altogether.
56
59 Installation view o f Krzysztof Bednarski’s Total Portrait o f M a rx , 1978.
NOTES
58
literally —in the form of iconoclasm exhibition (cat. no. 544, vol. I, p. 420),
and vandalism - and, more figura/ ‘the gesture of monstrance (ostension),
tively, in destructive texts and images. like that of the oath, participates in a
6 For a more complete discussion of the notion going far beyond that of the
various heated debates and proposals Revolution itself: it is that of a
concerning the destruction and/or founding gesture, which implies the
conservation of the national social contract.’
patrimony, see Kennedy (note 5), pp. 11 Arasse (note 7), p. 67.
197-234 and Edouard Pommier in 12 N in a A thanasso g lo u 'K allm y er,
AuxArmes & A uxA rts! Les Arts de la ‘Gericault’s Severed Heads and
Revolution ljS g -ijg g , ed. P. Bordes Limbs: The Politics and Aesthetics of
and R. Michel, Paris, Editions A dam the Scaffold’, The A rt Bulletin 74
Biro, 1988, pp. 175-97. The term (December 1992): 614.
‘vandalism’ had been created by the 13 Rosalind E. Krauss, Cindy Sherman,
Montagnards to condemn random acts 1975-1993, with an essay by Norman
of popular destruction, with an Bryson, New York and London,
obvious reference to the Barbarians, Rizzoli, 1993, pp. 93-94.
‘Vandals and Goths’ who had mdis' 14 Ibid., p. 97.
criminately destroyed the heritage of 15 Karl Marx, the Communist Manifesto,
Roman civilization. The A bbe cited in Marshall Berman, A ll That Is
Gregoire used the term as early as Solid Melts Into Air: The Experience of
January 1794. (See Serge Bianchi, La Modernity, New York, Simon and
Revolution culturelle de Van II, Paris, Schuster, 1982, and London, Verso,
Aubier, 1982, pp. 166-68.) 1983, p. 21.
7 Daniel Arasse: La Guillotine et 16 Charles Baudelaire, ‘The Painter of
Vimaginaire de la Terreur, Paris, Modern Life’, in The Painter ofModern
Flammarion, 1987. Life and Other Essays, tr. and ed. by
8 ‘La guillotine “tranche les tetes avec la Jonathan Mayne, London, Phaidon,
vitesse du regard”,’ according to one 1964, p. 13.
contemporary observer. Cited in 17 Ibid., pp. 4—5.
Arasse (note 7), p. 49. 18 Ibid., p. 9.
9 I will not rehearse the elaborate 19 Berman (note 15), p. 144.
scenario of castration, specularity and 20 For an important examination o f the
signification that Neil Hertz brilliantly relation o f visual modernity and
sets forth in relation to the photography, see Jonathan Crary,
Revolutionary imagery of decapitation Techniques ofthe Observer: On Vision and
- including this print - in his article Modernity in the Nineteenth Century,
‘Medusa’s Head: Male Hysteria under Cambridge, Massachusetts, and
Political Pressure’, Representations 4 London, M IT Press, T990.
(Fall 1983): 27-54. 21 David Frisby, Fragments of Modernity:
10 ‘In effect’, declares Jeremie Benoit in Theories of Modernity in the Work
the catalogue of the French Revolution of Simmel, Kracauer and Benjamin,
59
Cambridge, Polity Press, 1985, 28 Julius Meien-Graefe, Edouard Manet,
38—108, and especially 40—41 and 75. Munich, 1912, p. 216.
22 Theodore Reff, ‘Manet’s “Portrait o f 29 But see Emily S. Apter, Feminizing
Zola” ’, Burlington Magazine, January the Fetish: Psychoanalysis and Narrative
1975. P- 4 i- Obsession in Turn'of'the'C entury 1
23 For a complete examination of France, Ithaca, N.Y., Cornell
Manet’s Masked Ball at the Opera, as University Press, 1991, for a different
well as a preliminary setting forth of interpretation of fetishism itself in
some of the points made here, see relation to the feminine subject.
Linda Nochlin, ‘Manet’s Masked Ball Marx’s definition of commodity 1
at the Opera’, in The Politics o f Vision: fetishism - the existence of social
Essays on N ineteenth'C entury A r t and relations between objects and material
Society, New York, Harper & Row, relations between persons — is also
1989, and London, Thames and relevant to the understanding of
Hudson, 1991, pp. 75—94. the body parts represented here.
24 See Jean C . H arris,‘A Littlez-Known 30 Cited by Theodore Reff in ‘The
Essay on Manet by Stephane Chronology of Degas’s Notebooks’,
Mallarme’, The A r t Bulletin 46 Burlington Magazine, December 1965,
(December 1964): 561. Mallarme’s p. 614.
essay had originally appeared in the 31 Van Gogh, cited in A nne Pingeot,
English A r t Monthly Review in 1876. L e Corps en morceaux (exh. cat.),
25 For the association o f the lack of Paris, Musee d’Orsay, 1990, p. 142.
narrative closure in art and literature 32 Georges Bataille, ‘Sacrificial
with realism, and the association of Mutilation and the Severed Ear of
realism with photography, see Linda Vincent Van G ogh’, in Visions of
Nochlin, Realism, Harmondsworth, Excess: Selected Writings tg z j- ig ^ g ,
Middx, Penguin Books, 1971, passim. ed. A llan Stoekl, Minneapolis,
26 For an incisive reading of the University ofMinnesota Press, 1993,
fetishistic significance of the female pp. 61-72
leg in the midmineteenth century, 33 See Carolyn J. Dean, The S e lf and Its
more specifically the legs of the notori-- Pleasures: Bataille, Lacan, and the
ous Countess de Castiglione, see History o f the Decentered Subject,
A bigail SolomotvGodeau, ‘The Ithaca, N.Y., and London, Cornell
Legs of the Countess’, October 39 University Press, 1992, pp. 232-34,
(Winter 1986): 65—108. for information on Bataille and Van
27 Thomas Crow, ‘Modernism and Gogh as well as citations.
Mass Culture in the Visual A rts’, in 34 For the best and most complex analy'
Modernism and Modernity: The Vancou' sis of this painting, see Meyer
ver Conference Papers, cd. Benjamin Schapiro, Cezanne, New York,
H . D. Buchloh et a!., Halifax, Nova Harry N. Abrams, 1952, p. 98.
Scotia, Nova Scotia College of A rt 35 This claim has been made for one of
and Design, 1983, pp. 215-64. the founding instances of modernity.
60
the French Revolution itself, by no less on the Partial Figure’, Artjorum 8
an authority than Francois Furet, who (November 1969): 58—63.
asserts that the Revolution ‘sought to 37 See Rosalind E. Krauss, L ’Am our
restructure, by an act of imagination, Fou: Photography and Surrealism,
wholeness to a society that lay in Washington, D .C., Corcoran Gallery
pieces’. (Penser la Revolution franpaise, of A rt; New York, Abbeville Press,
Paris, Gallimard, 1978, pp. 48-49.) 1985, for a more complete account of
36 The role of the fragment in the art of Bellmer and Surrealist photography
the twentieth century would require generally.
another bookdength study. The same 38 The photograph is taken from the
might be said of the fragment in rela^ catalogue, Le Corps en morceaux (note
tion to the sculpture of both the nine' 36) p. 86, fig. 137. A similar
teenth and the twentieth centuries. In photograph of the artist Robert
the case of the latter subject, however, Rauschenberg as a very young man
there already exist several important standing next to the giant hand
texts, among them Le Corps en appeared in the N ew York Times on 10
morceaux (exh. cat.), ed. A nne April 1994, as an advertisement for an
Pingeot, Pans, Musee d’Orsay, 1990, exhibition at the Chicago A rt
and the catalogue of the pioneering Institute. It seems to be a popular
exhibition organized by A lbert E. trope!
Elsen, The Partial Figure in Modern 39 This photograph served as an
Sculpture: From Rodin to 15)69, illustration to Ewa Lajen-Burcharth’s
Baltimore Museum of A rt, 1969-70, article ‘Warsaw Diary’, A r t in
as well as an article by Elsen, ‘Notes America, February 1994, p. 87.
6l
LIST OF IL L U ST R A T IO N S
2. Fragment ofa foot o f an equestrian statue 11. T heodore Gericault, The Swiss
of Louis XIV, c. 1699. Bronze. Musee du Guard at the Louvre, 1819. Lithograph.
Louvre, Paris. © Photo R.M .N. Bibliotheque Nationale de France, Paris.
62
19- Edgar D egas, Ludovic Lepic and 30. Edouard Manet, Nana, 1 877. O il on
Daughters in the Place de la Concorde, mid/ canvas. Kunsthalle, Hamburg.
1870s. O il on canvas, destroyed during
World War II. Photo courtesy Calmann 31. Edouard M anet, The Beer'Server,
King Ltd. 1878-79. O il on canvas. Musee d’Orsay,
Paris.
20. Gustave C aille b o tte , Le Pont de
32. 33. Edouard Manet, A Bar at the
VEurope, 1876. O il on canvas. Musee du
Folies'Bergere, 1882. O il on canvas.
Petit Palais, Geneva.
Courtauld Institute Galleries, London.
21. Claude Monet, Care Saint'Lazare,
34, 35. Edouard Manet, Masked Ball at
1877. O il on canvas. Musee d ’Orsay, Paris.
the Opera, 1873. O il on canvas. © 1994
22. Claude Monet, Boulevard des National Gallery of A rt, Washington
Capucines, 1873. O il on canvas. Pushkin D .C ., Gift of Mrs Horace Havemeyer in
Museum, Moscow. memory of her mother/indaw, Louisine W.
Havemeyer.
23. Camille Pissarro, Place du Theatre
franfais, 1898. O il on canvas. Los Angeles 36. Edouard M anet, Note to Mme
County Museum of A rt, Mr. and Mrs. Guillemet, 1880. Note, with watercolour.
George Card de Sylva collection. Musee du Louvre, Paris, Cabinet des
Dessins. © Photo R.M .N.
24. Camille Pissarro, Paris, the Boulevard
Montmartre at N ight, 1897. O il on canvas. 37. Edouard Manet, A t the Cafe, c. 1880.
Reproduced by courtesy of the Trustees, The Watercolour. Musee du Louvre, Paris,
National Gallery, London. Cabinet des Dessins. © Photo R.M .N.
28,29. Edouard Manet, Portrait o f Zola, 42. H onore D aum ier , Orchestra during a
1868. O il on canvas. Musee d ’Orsay, Paris. Performance ofa Tragedy, 1852. Lithograph.
43- Edgar Degas, Orchestra at the Opera, van Gogh Foundation/National Museum
1870. O il on canvas. Musee d’Orsay, Paris. Vincent van Gogh, Amsterdam.
© Photo R.M .N.
51. V incent van Gogh, Self'portrait with
44. Edgar Degas, Cabaret, 1876. Pastel Bandaged Ear, 1889. O il on canvas.
over monotype. Collection of the Corcoran Courtauld Institute Galleries, London.
Gallery of A rt, Washington D .C ., William
A . Clark Collection.
52. Paul C ezanne, S till Life with Plaster
Cupid, c. 1895. O il on canvas. Courtauld
45. Edgar Degas, A t the Ballet: Woman Institute Galleries, London.
with the Fan, 1883/85. Pastel on paper.
53. P aul Cezanne, drawing after a
Philadelphia Museum of A rt, The John G.
C upid attributed to Puget, c. 1 890s. Pencil.
Johnson Collection.
British Museum, London.
46. Edgar Degas, A t the Theatre, 1880. 54. 55. Paul C ezanne, two drawings
Pastel on paper. Private Collection. Photo
after L ’Ecorche, c. 1875—86. Pencil. The A rt
Archives Durand/Ruel.
Institute of Chicago, A rthur Henn Fund,
47. Edgar Degas, The Lowering o f the 1951.1. page 19 recto, page 20 recto.
Curtain, 1880. Pastel on paper. Private 56. Cindy Sherman, U ntitled#2$o, 1992.
Collection. Photograph. Photo Metro Pictures, New
York.
48. V incent van Gogh, S till Life with
a Rose, Two Books and a Plaster C ast of a 57. R obert M applethorpe, Man in
Female Torso, 1887. O il on canvas. Vincent Polyester Suit, 1980. Photograph. Copy/
van Gogh Foundation/National Museum right © 1980, The Estate of Robert
Vincent van Gogh, Amsterdam. Mapplethorpe.
49. V incent van G ogh, Study after 58. A nonymous, The Sculptor Jeanclos in
Plaster C ast, 1886—87. Black chalk. Vincent front o f the Eland o f Constantine at the Capitol,
van Gogh Foundation/National Museum 1983. Photograph. Private Collection.
Vincent van Gogh, Amsterdam.
59. Installation view of Krzysztof
50. V incent van Gogh, S till Life with Bednarski’s Total Portrait o f M arx, 1978.
Open Bible, Extinguished Candle and Z o la ’s Plaster busts, photographs, mixed media, at
'Joie de Vivre’, 1885. O il on canvas. Vincent the Repassage Gallery, Warsaw.
64