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Publié par
Date de parution
12 décembre 2013
Nombre de lectures
0
EAN13
9781438449531
Langue
English
Publié par
Date de parution
12 décembre 2013
Nombre de lectures
0
EAN13
9781438449531
Langue
English
painting modernism
SUNY series in
LATIN AMERICAN AND IBERIAN THOUGHT AND CULTURE
Jorge J. E. Gracia and
Rosemary Geisdorfer Feal, editors
painting modernism
Ivan A. Schulman
state university of new york press
Cover art: Theoretical Icon (detail) from Duplicitous Icons series by John Michael Rusnak; 10 ft x 8.37 ft; abstract photography composed of India ink and stencil with overprinting on fiber based paper; 2011. Used by permission
Published by STATE UNIVERSITY OF NEW YORK PRESS Albany
© 2014 State University of New York
All rights reserved
Printed in the United States of America
No part of this book may be used or reproduced in any manner whatsoever without written permission. No part of this book may be stored in a retrieval system or transmitted in any form or by any means including electronic, electrostatic, magnetic tape, mechanical, photocopying, recording, or otherwise without the prior permission in writing of the publisher.
For information, contact State University of New York Press www.sunypress.edu
Production, Laurie Searl Marketing, Kate McDonnell
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
Schulman, Ivan A.
Painting modernism / Ivan A. Schulman.
pages cm. — (SUNY series in Latin American and Iberian Thought and Culture)
Includes bibliographical references and index.
ISBN 978-1-4384-4951-7 (hardcover : alk. paper)
1. Modernism (Literature)—Latin America. 2. Art and literature—Latin America. I. Title.
PQ6073.M6S34 2013
860.9’112—dc23
2013006240
10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1
To JMR, “vaso comunicante” illuminating the path of creativity
To MPG, to whom I owe my dedication to the study of Latin American modernism
If I could say it in words, there would be no reason to paint.
—EDWARD HOPPER
Hay mucho de pintura en la poesía, y hay mucho de poesía en la pintura …
—RUBÉN DARÍO
CONTENTS
Introduction
CHAPTER ONE
Crossing Boundaries: The Search for a New Discourse
CHAPTER TWO
Painted Narrations: The Modernist Novel
CHAPTER THREE
From Painting to Literary Text
CHAPTER FOUR
Facing the Orient
CHAPTER FIVE
Writers as Art Critics
CHAPTER SIX
An Epilogue and Conclusion: Words That Create Objects
Notes
Bibliography
Index
INTRODUCTION
This book deals with a major aspect of Latin American modernism that canonical criticism has neglected to examine in its various dimensions. 1 The chapters of Painting Modernism are constructed upon the fundamental notion that literary texts should no longer be studied in isolation from other artistic discourses and that as a consequence we need to (re)examine the works generated by the writers affiliated with Latin American modernism, whose textual production transcends the limits of language and verbal imagery, or as David Scott has noted in chronicling the early history of “writing the arts”:
… inter-art correspondences … [are] predicated in part on a new concept of the artist, one that implie[s] the widening of the term to include the writer and the musician on the same footing as the painter and sculptor. (66)
We also are guided by the notion that “seeing comes before words” 2 and that it is “seeing which establishes our place in the surrounding world; we explain that world with words, but words can never undo the fact that we are surrounded by it.” 3
In the chapters that follow we use the term modernism in its broadest multidimensional implications, overriding traditional conceptualizations that both in the past and present view its texts as nothing more than aesthetic and escapist creations belonging to a period between 1888 and 1916. 4 As we have indicated elsewhere, 5 modernism’s texts are both literary and social, and they are tied to the advent of Latin America’s socioeconomic modernization; its writers, either consciously or unconsciously, responded in similar but fundamentally different ways to the new sociocultural order created by this process in texts that appeared as early as 1875 and as late as the second and third decades of the twentieth century. Modernism revisited today in the light of contemporary revisionist scholarship contains what we have referred to as “secret genealogies” 6 tied to a revisioning of its texts, one that is posited on the notion that modernism needs to be understood as an early manifestation of the notion of textual instability, an inconstancy that Baudelaire expressed early on in his essay “The Painter of Modern Life” (Ward and Patty, 18). Thus envisioned, Latin American modernism—indeed Western modernism—contains cadences and multidimensional fluctuations both in its aesthetic as well as its ideological dimensions; its writers responded to the social and political developments that transformed their function in society and the nature of their art in a variety of different manners but with the common denominator of experimentations that included, among others, internalizations, retextualized appropriations of the past, the incorporation of techniques borrowed from the sister arts of painting and music, and the search for spiritual meaning in an age of increasing materialism and industrialization tied to the incipient stages of capitalist society. 7
José Martí (Cuba,1853–1895), one of modernism’s earliest literary theorists—and one of its principal writers—described the lack of constancy of these new-age transformations and the literary productions they produced, which he was instrumental in creating, 8 in the following manner: “There are no permanent works because the texts that belong to periods of realignment and restructuring are in essence mutable and turbulent: there are no set paths, new altars, broad and open as forests, are not yet visible …” (No hay obra permanente, porque las obras de los tiempos de reenquiciamiento y remolde son por esencia mudables e inquietas; no hay caminos constantes, vislúbranse apenas los altares nuevos …) (Martí 1963–1978, 7: 225]). 9 As a consequence, it is fallacious to view modernism as a school with prescribed or fixed modes of writing; its textual manifestations are multiple, heterological. Moreover, a rereading of the prose and poetry of this modern period of experimental literature reestablishes foundational links to subsequent postmodernist art. Its texts are a reflection of the openness, instability, ambiguity, and chaos of the metamorphic sociopolitical institutions of the modern world—West and East.
Latin American modernism—which spans both the latter half of the nineteenth century and the first half of the twentieth—is characterized, as we and other contemporary critics see it, by a pluralistic imaginary, and in that sense it is similar to the notion of the multiple existential philosophies of the twentieth century; and its texts are connected to elitist as well as to popular culture. In short, what we are suggesting, and what we hope will be evident in the chapters of this book, is that we subscribe to a revisionist notion of the nature and development of modernism that eschews micro in favor of macro discursive conceptualizations and produces a discourse that is visionary, not only in the traditional verbal sense but also in its links to plastic, especially painterly, associations.
Traditional critical discourse has preferred to emphasize a normative modernism viewed in terms of self-referentiality, fragmentation, elitist or escapist concepts, as well as subjective notions of cultural and aesthetic authenticity. The modernists’ literary art, especially their epistemological search for the meaning of the modern world’s new realities, has been described as an existential or teleological anguish conditioned more by emotional desperation than by a desire to understand in a rational way the ambiguous signs of nature and the reorganization of modernization’s social structures. But modernism’s aesthetic and social codes generated a literature that needs to be understood as a disconnect with the philosophical underpinnings of the Age of Reason or, in general, with Platonic, hierarchical structures. In the work of poets such as Rubén Darío (Nicaragua, 1867–1916), for example, there is a representative, constant search for individual and collective meaning, an attempt, colored by an underlying pessimism, to understand the restructured modernist world: “There are two gods; they are Ignorance and Oblivion” (Dos dioses hay, y son: Ignorancia y Olvido [“¡Ay, Triste del que un día …”]); or, “and not to know where we are going, nor from whence we came” (¡y no saber adónde vamos, / ni de dónde venimos! … [“Lo fatal”]). 10 In examining modernity, Paul de Man, reflecting upon this very epistemological question, writes that “the question of modernity reveals the paradoxical nature of a structure that makes lyric poetry into an enigma which never stops asking for the unreachable answer to its own riddle” (quoted in Ward and Patty, 186).
It is undeniable that the modernist imaginary demonstrates the presence of a personally based existential angst and a lack of reasoned hierarchical order. Nevertheless, it is still possible to discern generational commonalities among these writers as we hope to demonstrate in the pages that follow. In studying the interconnectivity of modernism’s discourses, in particular the union of the plastic and verbal arts,