Title: Aesthetics and politics
1Aesthetics and politics
2Speech acts
- Do not describe or narrate
- They make happen, instigate, produce
- These goals are desirable for both political and
aesthetic reasons - Manifestoes cause things to occur, usher newness
into the world - The poetry of the future is political and
aesthetic at once
3But there are real differences
- Political manifestoes tend to come from the Left
- Socialist
- politicize art
- The art manifestoes were looking at are from
the Right - Socialism co-opted
- aestheticise politics
the manifesto, now situated in politics and in
art, became a genre through which art and
politics could communicate, a kind of membrane
that allowed for exchange between them even as it
also kept them apart. (Martin Puchner)
4Why art manifestoes?
- The old ways have become official
- Academic art (Neoclassicism, Romanticism)
- Collective need to break loose
- Politicise the field of Art
- Modernism needed manifestoes, to militarize the
terrain
5Signor Marinetti
- Futurist Manifesto (1909, etc., etc.)
- Cult of the machine
- Modernity as speed
- The beauty of speed
- Enriches the worlds magnificence!
- We want to hymn the man at the wheel
6Marinettis violence of language
- We intend to sing the love of danger, the habit
of energy and fearlessness. - Lets break out of the horrible shell of wisdom
and throw ourselves like pride-ripened fruit into
the wide, contorted mouth of the wind! Lets give
ourselves utterly to the Unknown, not in
desperation but only to replenish the deep wells
of the Absurd! - faces smeared with good factory muckplastered
with metallic waste, with senseless sweat, with
celestial soot.
7Violence to and of language
- War with the decorum of polite expression
- Transvaulation topsy-turvy values
- Oh! Maternal ditch fair factory drain
nourishing sludge - Unpredictable locutions and images
8Futurist Art
- Follows manifesto!
- Energy, aggressiveness, violence and heroism
- Anti-Nature pro-machine
- Fascist, anti-feminist
- We will glorify warthe worlds only
hygienemilitarism, patriotism, the destructive
gesture of freedom-bringers, beautiful ideas
worth dying for, and scorn of woman.
Carlo Carrà Funeral of the Anarchist Galli
Umberto Boccioni Unique Forms of Continuity (1913)
9More Futurism
10C19th is a Woman
- Victorian culture is effeminate
- Sentimental
- The spectral vampire of tradition
- It must be conjured away!
11Futurism is a Phallus
- The poet must spend himself with ardor,
splendor, and generosity, to swell the
enthusiastic fervor of the primordial elements. - We will destroy the museums, libraries,
academies of every kind, will fight moralism,
feminism, every opportunistic or utilitarian
cowardice.
12Toward the post-human
- Man machine Centaurs of modernity
- Cyborgs men-machines
- Beyond sexual difference, beyond erotics
- Thus the technophilic typefaces, etc.
13Against all rules
- Printed page has material properties
- These could be exploited, played with
- The text performs its argument against prescribed
forms
14Advertising?
- Promotional zeal
- Rhetoric of salesmanship
- Shameless hucksterism
- Variety shows
- Futurist underpants
15Marinetti in London
- The great Futurist metropolis
- In the audience Ezra Pound and Wyndham Lewis
- Resent being told what to do by an Italian
- But inspired anyway
Ezra Pound
Wyndham Lewis
16Pounds Imagism
- A manifesto of Donts (1911) thou shalt not
- Proscriptions and prohibitions
- no superfluous word
- go in fear of abstractions
- Dont be viewy
- Etc., etc., etc
17Modernism taboos!
- In order to make it new the poet has to avoid
every trap laid by the C19th - Tradition unequivocally repudiated
- The recent past becomes inauthentic
18Voice of the drill-sergeant
- Artistic cadres must be disciplined
- Hard, muscled bodies
- Hectored and instructed
- Imperative mood, unflagging vigilance
19Victorianism effeminacy
- blurry, messy, sentimentalistic, mannerish
- perdamnable rhetoric, luxurious riot
- fewer painted adjectives impeding the shock and
stroke of it the poem?! austere, direct, free
from emotional slither
NO!
YES!
20Wyndham Lewis
- Editor of BLAST (1914-15)
- Review of the Great English Vortex
- Manifesto of Vorticism
- English avant-garde proper
- Post-futurist (already)
- The genre of the art manifesto comes into its
own
21BLAST, no. 1 (1914)
- Big, puce cover!
- Enormous swaggering arrogance
- The true home of the artistic revolution is
England! - Tongue-in-cheek appropriation of genre
22Extremity beyond extremes
- Accepts the manifestic we
- Accepts the division of the field into divided
camps - But then goes further
- Opportunist primitive mercenaries
- The only point of BLAST is the aggravation of
Civil War between apes
- Beyond Action and Reaction we would establish
ourselves. - We start from opposite statements of a chosen
world. Set up violent structure of adolescent
clearness between two extremes. - We discharge ourselves on both sides.
- We fight first on one side, then on the other,
but always for the SAME cause, which is neither
side or both sides and ours. - Mercenaries were always the best troops.
- We are primitive Mercenaries in the Modern World.
- Our Cause is NO-MAN'S.
- We set Humour at Humour's throat. Stir up Civil
War among peaceful apes.
23Graphic design as provocation
- Variable font size
- Variable tabs
- Variable CAPS
- Vertical and horizontal lines
- Text as text
- Imperative, arresting, intemperate
24Serio-comic mode
- Humour
- Dont take it all seriously
- But accept the basic thrust
- Nature must be made war against
- We need clean arched shapes and angular plots
- Geometry vs. organicism
25Violent remedies
- Rigid and purified forms
- No truck with conventions of expression or
representation - Militarism of outlook
- Masculinism of view
Wyndham Lewis, Portrait of an Englishwoman
26Sexual politics, again
- Victorian era dismissed as feminine
- Vampiric, sucking life-blood out of healthy,
modern men - Terror of castration
- Horror of Eros