Sunday, 31 March 2013
Friday, 29 March 2013
JEAN DUBUFFET: TRANSITIONS
Pallant House Gallery, Chichester
(Yes,
another art exhibition that's come and gone. Would you expect anything
else around here?)
”Our
culture is like a garment... that no longer fits us. This culture is
like a dead language that no longer has anything in common with the
language of the street. It is increasingly alien to our lives.”
- Dubuffet
Art
in the Raw
Jean
Dubuffet is a smart choice on the Pallant House gallery's part. Like
Edward Burra who graced these walls before him he's an
important figure who's been neglected by British galleries in recent
times. (By their reckoning, for nearly fifty years!) But more
importantly he was arguably the rock that started the rolling,
outsider art's Johnny Rotten and Malcolm McClaren rolled into one. He
coined the term Art Brut (“raw art”) in 1945, as he sought an
antidote to classicist orthodoxies outside the art world. He waxed
lyrical over art which was “completely pure, raw... invented in all
it's phases by the artist, from his impulses alone.”
All
of which, needless to say, is a hopeless romanticism. Dubuffet was
using the mentally ill in the way Gauguin
used Tahitian islanders or Picasso
African art – fetishistically, expecting somebody else to
busy themselves with building your escape capsule, envisaging a group
of noble savages who had somehow escaped all of society's
conditioning. It's labelling the other according to your needs.
Except
worse. The wish to reframe insanity as some kind of super-lucidity, a
kind of contemporary sequel to shamanism, seems a lot to load on
people who weren't coping that well with life in the first place.
It's like when a rich person comments the homeless are free of ties.
The correct rejoinder is “how the hell would you know?”
Yet
let's not be too hasty. Unlike Gauguin or Picasso
Dubuffet was no mere plunderer, he was as interested in collecting
and displaying examples of Art Brut as he was in it influencing his
own art. And he was as interested in art by children or the otherwise
untrained as he was by the insane - it was merely the last group that
won all the notoriety.
Plus,
more widely, Modernism had a history of being right for all the wrong
reasons. Art Brut did prove a handy method of slipping the seemingly
pervasive rules of Classicism, which at that point seemed so
naturalised, of getting back to making marks on paper. Though
Dubuffet was influenced by and associated with the Surrealists, in
this sense Art Brut was as much a proto-punk movement.
The
show starts with a quote from the man describing his two tendencies - “to exaggerate the marks of invention, and the other, the opposite,
which leads me to eliminate all human presence... and drink from the
source of absence.”
The
Source of Absence
...which
is followed, naturally enough by an example of each tendency. “The
source of absence” is represented by one of his Texturologie
paintings 'Texturologie IX (Jain)' (1957). (The
illo above is actually of 'Texturologie VIII (Dec)',
but is probably enough to give you an idea.) Dubuffet painted this
series flat on the floor, often scattering sand on the canvas,
attacking the surface with sandpaper and other abrasive substances,
or scoring it with a fork. The results look as though they could have
almost been made by some random process, even by being left out in
the elements. The question they ask us is – why bother to
paint things, when you can make suggestive marks
which work just as well, if not better?
They're
like Ernst's
frottage and grattage works pushed along a step, with the
apparent absence of an image creating a mystery in the mind of the viewer. The point isn't so much that eventually you do decipher some
hidden image, like in a join-the-dots game. What makes the viewing
compelling isn't the image you make out, so much as the prevailing
sense you're just on the cusp of descerning it. In today's bid for
Pseud's Corner I'm going to suggest these paintings work more like
meditational aids; your eye lingers, just as when you watch clouds
pass in the sky.
They
remind me of all the times I've blithely quoted Norbert Lynton's line
about Picasso being close to the roots of art. You look at this work
and start to feel that Picasso was really reclining in the penthouse
of art while Dubuffet laboured in the basement, scratching
obsessively on the walls with a compass end. This is art at it's most
hands-on, most inky-fingered.
Mapping
the Ghost Society
The
following works belong to a loose series dubbed the Paris Circle,
made as Dubuffet returned to live in the French capital. These
couldn't be more unlike the celebration of the 'gay' Paris in
Impressionism, a parade of peacocks, it's streets teeming but
possessed of some underlying order.
'Affluence
(Attendance)' (March 1961, above) seems deliberately poised
to leave you unsure whether this is a crowd scene or just a page of
doodles, a jumble of faces. Each face is (as the indicia puts it)
“lit in streaky whites and pinks”, while the torsos are filled in
with darker hues, their separating black outlines left barely
visible. This throws the faces into the foreground, as if they float
on some murky sea. Each is seen either straight on or as a perfect
profile. And even when the figures face each other, such as in the
upper left, it's hard to figure out whether they are actually
engaging one another or just happen to be lined up together on a
canvas.
It's
so reminiscent of the drawing exercise where you fill a sheet of
paper with cartoon heads, each one a separate character caught in as
few lines as possible, that this cannot be accidental. Dubuffet said himself: “I do not see in what way the
face of a man should be a less interesting landscape than any other.
A man, the physical person of a man, is a little world, like any
other country, with its towns, and suburbs.”
The
sense of that ambiguity being deliberate, as if the faces themselves
are not sure whether they are linked or not, is taken up by a
subsequent painting – 'Vire-Volte (Spinning Around)'
(May 1961, above), which hits you like the onset of a fever. This time the
figures are in a definite street scene, but it doesn't appear to be
doing them much good. They're split into two by a central barrier
that seems more undulating river than neat, straight road. Yet even
within their own sides they line up awkwardly, stuck together and yet
simultaneously isolated. (I would semi-seriously link this painting
to the celebrated French distaste for queueing!)
Their
bold white outlines at first make the background appear flat, yet
rather than reassuringly solid it's a morphing surface of shades and
hues - like a bruised skin. The signs in the background are parodies
of shop names, saying things like 'Knick-Knacks' or 'Ghost Society.'
Notably
in the introductory quote Dubuffet contrasted the dead language of
culture with the streets, and here he is clearly putting forward Art
Brut as a more contemporary method of expressing the alienating urban
experience. The naïve, child-like style of the work reacts potently
with the grotesque subject matter. It induces a reaction similar to
when you see art by children who have been in a war zone; shootings
and bombings depicted in the deadpan, innocent style usually reserved
for picnics and birthdays. Yet here it is not the friction of style
against content that causes that reaction - rather, it is how
spookily easily the two fit together. The division of the painting
into zones, the isolated, heavily outlined figures... it's like the
direct eye of children's art saw the harsh truth all along, which the
soothing classical conventions of our culture tried to shelter us
from.
'The
Irish Jig (Le Gigue Irlandaise' (Sept 1961, above) is
another sequel to 'Affluence', albeit one that
takes things in quite a different direction. It's almost like a
time-lapse photo taken after the earlier painting, with the faces
reduced to morphing, cellular forms – form fading away before your
eyes. The faces are still semi-visible through cartoon motifs, dots
within circles as eyes, stretched sausages as mouths. But what most
jumps at you is the change in palette, the murky browns, bruised
purples and off-whites left behind for a riot of bold primary
colours. (That these three pictures could have been created within a
matter of months seems extraordinary.)
A
Mad Desire To Impose Order
It's
this work which provides the link to the Hourloupe series, which
Dubuffet worked on through the rest of the Sixties and dominates the
rest of the exhibition. The word, though invented, seems rooted in
“hourler” (to shout), “hurler“ (to howl), “loup” (wolf)
and last but not least “l'entourloupe” (to make a fool of).
These
sprang from doodles Dubuffet absently made while on the phone. After
the cellular jigsaw puzzle of 'Irish Jig', the
individual elements become larger, more amorphous and more complex,
just as the colour scheme reduces to red, blue and black, often in
the form of stripes. These are them fitted into the outline of an
overall shape, such as in 'Solario' (1961, up top)
or 'Site Inhabited By Objects' (1961, above).
Dubuffet’s
intention seems to have been to challenge the apparent solidity of
objects; what appears to be a teacup sitting stoutly on the shelf, or
even the head of another human being, is actually only a morphing
swirl of atoms on which we impose our prejudices and associations. He commented how he “intended to challenge the objective
nature of being. The notion of being is presented here as relative
rather than irrefutable: it is merely a projection of our minds, a
whim of our thinking.”
Though
I like not one single thing about any of these works, which look to
me like nothing other than crazy paving on bad drugs, it's those
regular, stick-of-rock stripes that really rankle. The volatility of
the earlier works is held in thrall by those bold outlines,
imprisoned by those stripes as evenly spaced as the bars of a
dungeon. After the savage figures and suggestive forms of earlier,
it's like swapping the wild woods for an English country garden.
In
a reversal of the standard dictum of Modernism, the works look wrong
in all the wrong ways - not shamanic and visionary
but obsessive-compulsive, a mad desire to impose order. (With their
questioning of objects they seemingly resemble Cubism. But this is
superficial, for they're just one-faced likenesses.)
Yet
at the same time with their bright colours they seem fashionably
Sixties, almost 'pop' in effect. (At this time Dubuffet also took to
using contemporary disposable materials such as polystyrene for
sculpture.) Given the changes in art around that time, principally
the growth of pop, there's the taint of opportunism about this new
direction. The result is a strange, queasy mixture of the calculated
and the disturbing – they're psychotically jolly.
The
Hourloupes probably work best used as elements of design, such as in
the twin posters Dubuffet made for his Tate and ICA shows in 1966
(above). Though the text is hand-drawn and lent a charming wonkiness,
the straight letter forms still give the morphing cells something to
rebel against. (Dubuffet would seem to have excelled in design. The
show includes other posters, catalogues and even invitation cards he
designed – all simple yet striking.)
The
exhibition, in short, suckered me in with a few fantastic
introductory works then proved a let-down with almost every
subsequent room. In one way I feel like I'd finally got to hear the Stones, but heard a compilation chiefly devoted to the Eighties and Nineties. But perhaps there's an upside to that. I came out of
the Burra show feeling I'd had my knowledge and appreciation of him
expanded, but as a consequence wouldn't need to see another Burra
show for a while. I came out of this feeling I'd had my interest in
Dubuffet piqued rather than sated. Like his Texturologie paintings,
not only is his mystery, his allure, still out there but I feel it
more keenly than before. Dubuffet is still raw to me.
This
Dubuffet exhibition was part of a group of shows at the Pallant
House Under the umbrella title 'Outside In', all dedicated to various forms of Outsider Art. To hear about
the others go here...
Sunday, 24 March 2013
THE LENS OF LUCID FRENZY IS STILL GOING ON ABOUT IT'S SICILIAN HOLIDAYS...
...this time Mount Tauro (above Taormina) and Mazzaro (the beach below it). More here. (And more still to come...)
Friday, 15 March 2013
PRE-RAPHAELITES: VICTORIAN AVANT-GARDE
An adventure comprising the following; your humble narrator, being stout of heart and eager-eyed, ventured midst Winter's harm to London, heart of Empire, to attend that great institute Tate Britannia, for a viewing of pictures composed by the gentlemen comprising the Pre-Raphaelite Brotherhood. Though moved to speak of this, alas your narrator did not exhibit the industrious vigour of his ostensible subject and was remiss in inflaming his Babbage engine, with the result that he elucidates over an exhibition no longer available for public viewing.
Image
Clashes With Symbol
What
lurks behind that apparently oxymoronic subhead, 'Victorian
avant-garde?' The suggestion that these late Victorian artists were
proto-modern may simply be a handy means to incorporate them into the
Tate's set-list. (The venue's clock normally starts at 1900.) But it
does have some traction. Like so many Modernist movements the
Pre-Raphaelites were a distinct reaction to what had gone before, to
the point where they even formed a Brotherhood and wrote up a ringing
(if somewhat vaguely worded) manifesto.
As
the Tate website has it, “rather then emulate the early
masters, they espoused a rule-breaking originality.” They also
strove for a unity of the arts, embracing painting, music,
architecture and sculpture and became directly involved in the Arts
and Crafts movement. (An involvement which gets a room devoted to it,
but will sadly go under-noted here.)
Yet
at the same time their striving to move painting forward involved
looking further back. In their case this was an attempt to re-aquaint
themselves with the earlier masters, the world
before Classicism and in particular (in a name-defining statement)
before Renaissance artist Raphael. Which of course is itself very
much a feature of Modernism, for example in
Gauguin's fixation with folk art.
But
shouldn't we be suspcious of the whole term 'avant-garde', with it's
linear assumptions about history? Shouldn't our focus be not so much
on the group as harbingers of Modernism, but more on their historical
context? Of course the answer there is yes, but even that is not
enough - and would lead to us bypassing most of what is unique and
significant about them. Merely finding their point in a lineage
suggests art is made up of neat steps, ordered in a clear-cut ascent.
But art history works more like history, the story
of combustible chemicals thrown into an ever-more volatile mix.
The
artistic context of the Pre-Raphaelites is of course Romanticism. In
many ways it is hard to get a handle on this, which was less a
defined art movement than a meta-movement (akin to Modernism) and
perhaps by consequence was volatile and inchoate. Moreover, as a
reaction against the Enlightenment it prized feeling over intellect,
and was thereby virtually opposed to coherence on a point of
principle.
But
if there's scant use in asking Romanticism to define itself, we can
come up with some ideas of our own. While Romanticism sought solace
from and inspiration in nature, it's degree of fidelity to nature
varied greatly. It was at root concerned with accessing the human
imagination – the hay wain of the mind. It's not that it failed to
distinguish between the natural world and the human mind – it's
that it is precisely predicated upon refusing to make that
distinction. To Wordsworth the daffodils of the field were just
triggers for the daffodils in his head.
Yet
the Pre-Raphaelites had come rather late to this party. As a
reaction to the the growing Industrial Revolution, the peak of Romanticism is normally considered to be 1800-1840 when Turner and
Constable were at work.
What
else was afoot at this time? A reliable source of gossip states that by “the second half
of the 19th century, Realism
was
offered as a polarized opposite to Romanticism” and goes on to give
it exactly the same starting point as this show does the
Pre-Raphaelites – the 1848 revolution. Across the water
in France, Realist painters such as Manet, Courbet and Corot no
longer set their star by Classical or Biblical scenes but by fidelity
to daily life.
If
this band took a different tack, perhaps we should look at that
“pre-Raphael” business by which they tagged themselves? Their
backwards looks were chiefly to Florentine religious art, represented
here by Lorenzo Monaco's altar piece 'Adoring Saints'
(1407/9). This influence chiefly manifested in the brighter, more
sumptuous use of colour which is such a signature of a Pre-Raphaelite
work. As Franny Moyle says “The revolutionary use of colour at the
very least justifies Tate Britain's claim.” (Royal Academy
magazine, Autumn 2012).
A
sound-bite description of the group might be the attempt to make a
painting as vivid as a stained-glass window. The works almost radiate
with colour! (Though as any fule kno, the 'masters' then venerated by
the Academy had never actually painted the drab works thought of
them, their colours had literally faded before Victorian eyes were
set upon them.)
But
the Florentines made votive works, not for a gallery but a Church.
This different purpose gives them a different nature. The haloed
heads of the Saints are arranged in a constellation more than a
scene, a diagram which transmits a spiritual meaning to the believer.
And that's an influence you can see at work in this exhibition.
So
with the Pre-Raphaelites Romanticism, Realism and a kind of
heightened symbolism collided head-on. Like particles being bashed
together in a super-collider, image crashes against symbol. This
sometimes created something unexpected – a kind of dazzling
hyper-realism. Objects don't look removed or otherly as they would in
later Symbolism, they look rooted in this world. But at the same time
they can branch off into quite a different one.
However,
it seems less likely that any of this collision course was a
deliberate plan, and more likely that the Pre-Raphaelities were
unaware of any of those contradictions until they arose on their
canvases. With rather haphazard results - some Pre-Raphaelite works
can look intoxicating blends and others more like car crashes.
Take
for example William Holman Hunt's 'The Scapegoat'
(1854/6, above). Jesus' sacrifice had became associated with the
Hebrew tradition of making a goat the repository of human sins, then
driving it out into the wilderness. In this sense the painting is a
pointer, a religious allegory, we should see the
goat but think of Jesus. Yet at the same time Hunt
went to the effort of taking a real goat to a real location.
The
painting consequently has a kind of double existence. There's
something too vivid, too laboured, too intense for
it to seem a straightforward nature painting. Yet some of that same
laboured intensity, the weighing down of the image with detail, holds
you to the work itself rather than giving your mind leave to wander
off into considering the symbolism. The Scapegoat, in short, is a
kind of push-me-pull you.
Yet
it works in a similar way to that seen earlier with Gauguin, what makes the work wrong is
simultaneously what makes it right. When it doesn't resolve quickly
into some easy reading, there comes to be something strange and
compelling about it. And that kind of ambiguity, isn't that what
makes art alive? In this way they win out over their contemporaries
the Realists. A painting that simply delineates something, even a
thing you approve of being painted, is simply done with too easily.
It's the art which evades easy resolution which lingers.
Scenes
Against Tableaus
When
talking about the Pre-Raphaelites' influence on Modernism,
commentators are tempted to play up their realist side and talk about
the similarities between them and the Impressionists. True enough,
there are links there to be made. But for me that feels like chopping
off toes to make the foot fit the slipper. Yes, you can make the
story neater by cutting out the contradictions. But you then lose the
point of the story.
In
fact for years I have held on to the theory that their lurid
hyper-realism was more a precursor to the dream landscapes of
Surrealism, then it seems everybody else got in before me! Jonathan Jones for example, commented in the Guardian that in their “supercharged, luminous and
sometimes genuinely dream-like images... there is a direct line to...
surrealism.” Dali apparantly declared himself “dazzled by the
flagrant surrealism of the English Pre-Raphaelites.”
For
example compare Ernst's landscapes to Daniel Alexander Williamson's 'Spring, Arnside Knot and Coniston Range of Hills From Warton Crag'
(1863), where the desire to throw colours and textures about
is barely held in place by fidelity to the view.
But
anyway, what of that comparison to the Impressionists?
Pre-Romanticism, artists tended to make their compositions like grand
tableaus. They're not that different in effect to looking at dioramas
or even altar pieces. They appear in our space,
arrangements of symbols which we are intended to decode into moral
instructions. But with Romantic works there's a discovery of
pictorial space as a way to represent a scene, a desire to pull the
viewer inside the picture. They tend to be not poses but moments,
snippets of time and space. Art is no longer about what is public,
and we're less an audience and more visual eavesdroppers.
Take
for example John Everett Millais' first Pre-Raphaelite work -
'Isabella' (1849, above). The emphasis on the two
lovers comes not from the traditional means of centering and
arranging the other figures around them, but from their tender
interplay. The surrounding figures simply ignore them, as if unaware
of who's the subject of the painting.
While
the composition arranges the figures to the right of the table on a
neat diagonal, those to the left jut across one another. The one
partial exception is the figure in the left foreground who louchely
stretches out his leg, his chair tipped, yet his face intent on what
he's doing. It's not a pose struck, but a gesture caught. You can see
a kind of sequel to that leg in Millais' later 'Mariana'
(1850/1), which depicts a woman stretching as she stands after
working at her embroidery.
Yet
the Florentines linger and this new approach was not applied
consistently. Dante Gabriel Rossetti's first Pre-Raphaelite work, 'The Girlhood of Mary Virgin' (1848/9, above),
conversely is an uneasy blend of scene and tableau; halos on the
figures, an angel standing by, ostentateously displayed symbols
including books with their spines obligingly turned to us.
And
now we have touched on religion, why not stay there awhile?
A
Whole New Jesus For Our Age
In
one of the Gnostic traditions, Jesus never really took on human form.
He was actually a beam of light which merely looked like a man –
saviour as hologram. Of course that was a heresy, opposed by all the
major Churches. But there were traditions in religious art which
depicted him almost as though that might be
believed. He shines beatifically out of works, dominating the image
like a beaming sun with all else held in his orbit.
The
Pre-Raphaelites took this to almost the other extreme, with a
historical and even humanised Jesus - stones in his sandals, stubble
on his chin. In an unparalleled quest for authenticity they
researched artefacts and even went location-scouting to the Holy
Land.
Perhaps
Jesus is at his most humanised in William Dyce's 'The Man of
Sorrows' (1860, above). He is not preaching or performing
miracles, and there's not a disciple in sight. But it's not just that
he's alone in the wilderness, he's not even centred in the frame -
it's vastness expands behind him. Particularly with that
de-devinitising title, the viewer might be forgiven for thinking it
was the decidedly mortal John the Baptist being depicted.
(Incidentally, if that landscape doesn't look very Middle Eastern,
it's actually the Scottish highlands. Perhaps Dyce couldn't afford
the boat passage with the others.)
Standard
devotional images are alluded to at the same time as they are
avoided. In 'Christ
in the House of His Parents' aka 'The Carpenter's Shop'
(1849/50) Millais portrays the boy Jesus at home in his father's
shop, having cut his hand on a nail. Similarly, Hunt's 'The
Shadow of Death' (1870/3, below) has Jesus stretching, an
innocent act which creates the crucifixion pose on the wall behind
him.
It
was probably felt the standard images had been drained of their
meaning by over-use, and needed re-contextualising. Which seems less
Modernist than... well... modern. You could
imagine a contemporary retelling of the Gospel stories taking much
the same approach, taking the icons from oblique angles, trying to
find fresh perspectives on the over-familiar.
In
a sense this went quite neatly with English Protestantism, whose
Church services were deliberately less ostentatious and ceremonial
than in Catholicism or Orthodoxy. This is well illustrated by Ford
Madox Brown's 'First Translation of the Bible into English,' (1871/93), bookended by two figures above the
arch – one a cowelled monk holding a locked Bible to himself, the
other holding an opened book to the viewer.
And
yet Protestantism was associated with the dour liberalism that
Romanticism opposed, and besides by this point had morphed into the
Church of England which sought accord rather than challenge. The
Pre-Raphaelites were pushing at Protestantism from a more radical
side, playing up the conflicts of history in works such as Hunt's
(typically pithily titled) 'A Converted British Family Sheltering a Christian Missionary from thePersecution of the Druids' (1850).
Yet...
and there almost always seems a yet with the Pre-Raphaelites... their
art is bright and striking, not at all dourly Protestant in the way
we'd imagine. In fact the Florentines had given them a profoundly
Catholic flavour to their art.
Perhaps
unsurprisingly, then, it was their religious works which tended to be
the most controversial. No less a figure than Charles
Dickens railed against Millais' 'Christ in the
House of His Parents', calling Mary “so hideous in her
ugliness”, while
another critic railed against “portraying the youthful
Saviour as a red-headed Jew boy, and the sublime personage of the
virgin a sore-heeled, ugly, every-day sempstress.”
Apart
from this surprise at seeing a semitic face show up in the Middle
East, as the vid-link below points out “what caused controversy was
that Millais dared show the Holy Family as poor, working class
people.” Yet to a believer the Gnostics were wrong, and Jesus truly
took human form. In which case the double-value of the Pre-Raphaelite
image, both image and symbol, could be argued the perfect means to
capture such a duality.
Born
In Revolution?
The
show makes much of the Brotherhood being formed in 1848, “a year of
revolution across Europe.” Yet Romanticism has had a conflicting
relationship with politics, often drawn to the thrill of radical
ideas yet with its emphasis on the subjective self wary of
fully-fledged political commitment. Though most of the
Pre-Raphaelites seem to have held progressive views for their times,
and worked directly with socialist artists such as William Morris,
there's less of the radical ideas held by earlier Romantic poets such
as Blake or Shelley, or by their continental contemporaries the
Realists.
The
most political was probably the oldest, who was never formally a
Brotherhood member. Brown certainly tended to contemporary themes and
settings more than the others. The programme explains how his
'Work' (1852/62) “celebrates the
'nobleness and even sacredness' of labour, suggesting salvation for
the heroic manual workers rather than the idle rich.” Highly
unusually for a Pre-Raphaelite work, it's a straight-ahead
celebration of Victorian engineering and development. The aristos are pushed to be back of the composition by ditch-digging navvies who (bathed in light) are almost literally building a new world, the road stretching away to the right representing progress.
However,
it's Hogarthian rather than radical, for all the focus on the navvies
it's colours bourgeois rather than proletarian. Notably, this celebration of the
sacredness of labour extends to contrasting the stout-of-heart
navvies against the flower sellers to the left, whose torn dresses
suggest the more feckless poor. (The ripped brim of the front woman's
hat, revealing the woman's peering eyes is a peculiar touch.)
Moreover
the piling-up of figures sits awkwardly with the apparent naturalism.
The tableau-like composition suggests an aesthetic conservatism
closer to the standard Victorian concept of art as a moral guide.
Ultimately, it's composition is as indigestible as it's message.
(Personally I incline more to Joe Strummer's view, when he sang
“never loved a shovel”.)
Telling
Us A Story From the Old Days
In
rejecting Classicism the Pre-Raphaelites embraced Medievalism,
normally depicted as a golden age made up of noble hearts beating in
wooded glades - essentially Middle Earth before Sauron showed up to
despoil it.
But
the real point of Medievalism is of course to hearken. The era
appealed precisely because it had already been lost. Millais has a
recurring motif of leaves or flower petals on the ground. No matter
the time of year, these Medieval forests are always in a kind of
Autumn.
William
Shakespeare Burton's 'Wounded Cavalier' (1855/6,
above), immediately belies it's title by showing a Cavalier who is
almost probably dying. The slaying Puritan, rather than standing
triumphantly over his body, hangs his arms flatly and in his dark
clothes is pushed almost into the background. An intrusively placed
tree all but cancels him out in the composition, while his own maiden
ignores him to comfort the cavalier.
It
looks so unlikely that this drab and undynamic a figure could have
killed such a dashingly-dressed fellow that popular opinion assumes
we're seeing the result of an ambush. It's rather reminiscent of the
summation in '1066 and All That,' of the Cavaliers
as “Wrong but Wromantic” and the Roundheads “Right but
Repulsive.” In short, here the figure clutching the Bible is
essentially the bad guy.
The
English Revolution did not mark the end of the Medieval era of
course, not even in the Victorians' narrowed perspective of history.
But the picture suggests a worldview literally regressive as opposed
to progressive. The “pre” in their name never loomed larger than
here.
Their
numerous Shakespeare adaptations stem from this fixation, for he was
forever setting his plays in a faux-medieval garden of England -
which somehow stretched across the whole of a chivalric Europe.
Despite the afore-mentioned emphasis on scenes over tableaus, it's
this regurgitation of received images of Medievalism which so often
keeps the group in the hold of narrative painting. In this, in
another skewing to the notion of linear progression in art, they
notably look more Victorian than their predecessor
Turner.
Millais'
'A Huguenot on St. Bartholomews' Day, Refusing to Shield
Himself From Danger by Wearing the Roman Catholic Badge'
(1852, above) is of a French protestant defying a decree to wear a
symbol of Catholicism. Yet the lovers look to each other as they
embrace, not out at us, and you could easily take the white ribbon as
a token of love. It looks Romantic in the more colloquial sense we
use today. The picture becomes illustrational, it needs
that title (long and unwieldily enough to require punctuation). It's
not a work in and of itself but heavily reliant for it's meaning on a
wider context.
Similarly
Hunt's 'Valentina
Rescuing Sylvia From Proteus' (1850/1) cheerily assumes
it's audience is one of educated gentlemen who will be familiar with
Shakespeare's 'Two Gentlemen of Verona' and so
will have some clue who these funny-looking people are. (Personally,
I was lost!) At such points, Impressionism's direct experience
of the everyday world seems an age away.
Back
to Nature
John
Ruskin, one of the group's few contemporary supporters, enthused:
“every Pre-Raphaelite landscape background is painted to the last
touch, in the open air, from the thing itself. Every Pre-Raphaelite
figure, however studied in expression, is a true portrait of some
living person.” (Actually, and unlike the later Impressionists,
they often only drew only the landscapes from nature, and added the
foreground figures later from models in the studio.)
Nevertheless,
this raises the question – did depicting nature en plein
air take them beyond the trap of narrative? The answer, as
you're probably already guessed, is yes and no.
William
Dyce's 'Pegwell Bay, Kent - A Recollection of October 5th
1858' (1858/60, below) notably captures a moment in time,
not even the passing of a single afternoon but the onset of sunset.
The comet in the sky (top centre) pins it to the single day given in
the title, like a date-stamp on a digital camera.
The
show smartly places this next to Hunt's verdant 'Our English
Coasts' (aka 'Strayed Sheep' (1852,
above), keeping us wary of generalising about the Pre-Raphaelites too
much. This look English pastoralism gone psychedelic! Yet the
pictures don't just vary in season or in colour scheme – for, as
the second version of it's name makes more explicit, here symbolism
is back. Though Hunt's work contains not a single human figure, that
is actually the very thing which pushes it from a literal reading.
The sheep are being tended by the absent shepherd just as the
invisible, omnipresent God looks after his flock. What places him
nowhere makes him everywhere. This is underlined by the red marks of
ownership on their backs, as red was often used as a symbolic colour
for Jesus. (Look again at 'The Scapegoat.') In
short, what makes it a pure nature scene simultaneously makes it a
religious work.
A
recurrent feature is the dwarfed and isolated human figure, as in
John Brett's 'Val D'Aosta' (1851, below), a
stretching panoply of the Swiss alps. We see the goat in the lower
foreground before we see the peasant girl huddled beneath a rock.
But
as ever there's contrasts. Millais' 'John Ruskin'
(1853/4, above), again hung near the Brett, portraying the great
Romantic as a Victorian hero, masterfully standing astride a
landscape. (A veneration which didn't stop Millais' running off with
Ruskin's wife, but that's another story...)
Beauty
is Back!
...which
sets us up for the most bizarre paradox of the whole movement.
Rossetti, feeling bound by the contradictions outlined above, saw he
had to choose - and chose. He abandoned both narrative and fidelity to
nature to instead ramp up the symbolism. The programme claims “beauty
came to be valued more highly than truth” while Carl Jacobi
comments these “expressed an idea that colour, pattern and texture
were as important as subject matter” ('Art Quarterly',
Autumn 2012).
Varying
from the earlier insistence on the unity of the arts, Rossetti now
saw music as the medium to emulate. Music is non-mimetic, it doesn't
have to be about anything yet it can still move
the listener. Notably, musical instruments appeared frequently even
in earlier works while Rossetti's watercolour 'The Blue
Closet' (1856/7) uses it's composition to evoke the sound
of music.
Ironically
this new turn taken by Rossetti should strictly be called Aestheticism,
yet these are the works most popularly associated with
Pre-Raphaelites! Notably the poster image for the show is a later
Rossetti - 'Astarte Syriuaca' (1877, up top).
Perhaps they represent the Victorians as we like to think of them –
doomed romantics, consumptive poets – with all that cumbersome
baggage about weighty literature, religion and muesli moralism
removed.
You
see it as soon as you enter this exhibition. Images of the artists
include a self-portrait of a long-haired bohemian Rossetti among
others looking as upright and stiff-collared as only Victorians can.
Italian lineage even gave him that dashing, romance-novel name. Yet
taking Rossetti to represent the Pre-Raphaelites is like taking Dali
to represent Surrealism, it's taking the poster boy at face value,
it's taking the exception for the rule. At the same time, if these pieces easily transfer to the wall of a teenage bedroom, that
doesn't make them bad works in themselves.
There
was a biographical motivation as well as an aesthetic one, which
needless to say involved doomed romance. Rossetti's wife and model
Elizabeth Siddall had died young of a laudanum overdose, and is
presented in 'Beata Beatrix' (1864/70, above) as
tortured and as ecstatic as a martyred saint. (As in so much
Victorian fiction, there's a close relationship between female virtue
and being dead.) This composition doesn't place her in pictoral space
but surrounded by an arrangement of symbols – a red dove, a white
poppy, a sundial. In other works, backgrounds fade almost to
vanishing point.
It's
in the manner of the devotional Florentine works we saw earlier. Yet
it has the same relationship to them as Gospel to Soul; the religious
content is removed, while the religious fervour is retained and
reassigned to love. As Jonathan Jones said in the Guardian, “for Rossetti, painting and desire
were pretty much the same thing.”
This
inscrutable otherness of women was all but inevitable in a man's
world. As soon as they manage to shut the women up they start to
wonder what they're thinking. And the natural answer to that is not
to ask them but to try and paint
them.
Moreover,
Victorian society tended to assume women were closer to the world of
nature than the more civilized menfolk, and perhaps by consequence it
would most likely be impossible to separate the Pre-Raphaelites' view
of nature from their view of women. And one way to prove that would
be to look at the room in this exhibition that's ostensibly given
over to nature. Millais' 'Opehlia' (1851/2,
below), shows Shakespeare's heroine effectively melting back into the
nature from where she came.
Meanwhile
in 'Lady Lilith' (1865/8, below) Rossetti provides
the inevitable counterpoint to the doomed good girl Beatrix – the
femme fatale. While Beatrix's eyes are devotedly closed, Lilith's
vainly go to a mirror, highlit in the wickedest black. Lilith's evil
is underlined by this unnatural act, she is no innocent natural
beauty but has calculatedly made herself this way. Another mirror to
the top left reflects a nature scene, which she ignores in favour of
beautifying herself.
The
Brotherhood Break
Was
Rossetti really alone in turning to Aestheticism? The show tends to
present Edward Burne-Jones as his obliging henchman, following
wherever he leads. Who was something of a latecomer to the movement,
and possibly did idolise Rossetti somewhat in his early days. But the
evidence on show here suggests more that this divergence stretched
Burne-Jones, as he tried to straddle both new paths like the
offspring of divorcing parents.
It's
possible the fourth bigtime Pre-Raphaelite was like the Fifth Beatle
upside-down; there actually was one, but people always forget about
him. Certainly he often seems reconciled to his future as fodder for
for jobbing artists hired to provide covers for cheap fantasy novels.
Noble, shiny-armoured knights rescue fair maidens from phallic
beasts, who have already obligingly got their kit off in anticipation
of expressing their gratitude. (However, let's concede some of his
other works here are better than this, such as 'The
Golden Stairs,' 1876/80).
Besides,
Rossetti's new-found Aestheticism may have influenced the others more
than is made out. Compare Hunt's 'Isabella and the Pot of Basil' (1860/8, below) to Millais' earlier take on the same
legend and Keats poem. The crowds are gone, the focus on a single
female figure. Though you might wonder quite why she's cuddling a
plant pot, you could put that down to her ovulating mysteriousness.
Narrative may not have been eliminated so drastically as with
Rossetti, but it's been quite seriously curtailed.
Yet,
if they didn't follow in Rossetti's footsteps, the remaining
Brotherhood didn't always come up with much by way of competition.
Contradictions which were previously held in check or even pressed
into service finally blow up in their faces. Remember the earlier
warning about some works being car crashes? Hunt's 'The
Massacre of the Innocents' (1863/4, below) is enough of a
multi-pile-up on the M4 to get its own news item.
The
concept is that Jesus' parents escape with him from Herod, as the
spirits of the massacred infants accompany them. But with their
kitsch, cherubic chubbiness they jar with the realism of the rest of
the picture, without it being clear they're intended to inhabit a
different realm. It's a grand folly, a sorry mess.
Yet
Millais' 'Chill October' (1870, above) rids
itself of narrative perhaps even more effectively than Rossetti. Millais has perhaps proven himself more refined than Hunt throughout and this is perhaps the purest and most effective of the 'pure nature'
pictures – effectively putting you in a time and place, with little
of the standard day-glo colours. However much I can appreciate
'Our English Coasts' it looks like a
painting of England, a received image of a
storybook countryside, a cold country wishing it was a warm one.
'Chill October' is the place I live, the misty
semi-opaque landscape that seeped into my heart at some early age.
We're told it's one of a series of twenty-one, and I would like to
see more.
The
Lovers
Notably,
the Pre-Raphaelites provoke a kind of love/hate reaction. Unusually
for the quieter Tate Britain, there didn't seem much way of getting
into this show without booking in advance. Yet others can be quite
derisory about them. Apart from the standard snobbish distancing from
the popular, the chief red rag to their critics may be their bright
colour schemes, so easily dismissed as kitsch in technicolour. (Matthew Sweet wrote
of their “nougat-pink sk[ies] and Soylent Green foliage”, and
speculated we have a psychological need to picture the Victorians in
crisp black and white, “a world from which we can maintain our
distance”, 'Art Quarterly', Winter, 2012.)
Meanwhile,
perhaps their contradictions enable their fans to pick their response
– they can be a steam-punk avant-garde or proto-hippy
pastorialists, just as you choose. The irony couldn't be greater, you
strain your whole life for accuracy to your subject matter and others
see what they want in you regardless.
...which
makes the whole business rather hard to sum up. Whenever people don't
think of the totemic image of Pre-Raphaelism as Rossetti's
mysterious-but-demure poster girls, it tends to be the lovers. Of
course it's a universal theme, but as those lovers embrace they're
caught up in the moment. Which is kind of like Symbolism and Realism
giving each other a hug. If they put conflicting conceptions of art
in a super-collider, perhaps the image of the lovers is their
Higgs-Boson. Perhaps the afore-mentioned ambiguity of emphasis in
Millais' 'A Huguenot on St. Bartholomews' Day' was
not a mistake but a hidden intention honoured.
This
theme doesn't necessarily mean the Pre-Raphaelites were
subconsciously aware that their art had conflicting tendencies which
required reconciliation. But then again, it just might. And if the
lovers tiffed ended up squabbling over who owned the cutlery... well,
let's focus on the glory days. For unfashionable as it is to concede, when the boys were good, they were
really good.
Labels:
Art,
Fantasy,
Modernism,
Romanticism
Saturday, 9 March 2013
REPEATING PATTERNS/ RADIO REWRITE (MINIMALIST MUSIC ADVENTURES)
In
which the South Bank Centre treated us Minimalist music devotees to
two events within a week of each other, each with it's own focus...
REPEATING
PATTERNS
Subtitled
'The Start of Minimalism in the US', this London
Sinfonietta performance aimed to give us “an introduction to the
world of minimalism, tracing it's origins in 1960s New York loft
apartments and art galleries.” A self-description which however
enticing might even sell the show short, for while it stars veteran
New Yorkers Steve Reich and Philip Glass, it concludes where the
whole thing started - with 'In C' by Californian
Terry Riley. If Riley is the least-known here, this piece more than
any other could be described as the stem cell of Minimalism, the
breakthrough that made all subsequent developments possible. (Reich
even pitched in with it's first performance, back in '64.)
They're
right about the lofts, though. Back then these guys extemporised with
small groups of friends in whatever impromptu spaces they could find,
to audiences who occasionally made it into double figures. In a
recorded interview, Glass wryly commented on how in the early days
the New York critics simply wrote off not just them
but anything from Downtown New York. (He was told
“you have to draw the line somewhere. And we draw it at 34th
street.”) Nowadays Glass had composed operas and won Academy Awards
for his film scores, while Reich has a Pulitzer Prize for Music
sitting on his shelf.
Yet
while it's cool these guys finally overcame those cloth-eared critics
and hit the concert halls, it's sometimes overlooked this shift in
setting co-incided with a shift in the music. Performances grew to
larger ensembles, notation became tighter and non-instruments or
unorthodox sound sources were phased out. Were we
nomenclature-fixated folk, we could call this a shift from Early into
High Minimalism.
It's
as if the price of fame was to overlook the scene's lowly origins,
with these earlier pieces far less often performed. (Something
perhaps truer for Glass than for Reich. But notably the programme
from Reich's subsequent night spoke of him emerging “from the
early tape and phasing pieces to masterworks.”) It's as if we're
supposed to see them as experiments or try-outs, mere warm-ups for
the main act. So, while we're in the smallest venue the South Bank
Centre offers with an audience not a fraction of the size of the one
who showed up to see Reich himself the following week, it's
worthwhile to remember and celebrate this stuff.
Part
of the reason why it's sidelined is that, even more than High
Minimalism, it's music you have to see live – with every other
option a second-hand experience. That's partly because the
performance can have a ritual aspect, something we'll get onto
later. But there's also a more directly musical reason. Take Reich's
'It's Gonna Rain'; made from two phase-shifting
voice recordings, it may not seem a likely contender for the live
experience. Surely it will sound much the same as if you put the CD
on at home. Yet heard on the venue's vast PA instead of my reasonably
priced stereo, it became one of the highlights of the night. People
were nodding along to it as much as during any of the more obviously
musical pieces.
Part
of this response may be that the music bases itself on such... um...
basic sources. The opening piece, Glass'
'1+1' takes as it's instrumentation a guy thumping
a wooden desk. While in Reich's 'Pendulum Music'
microphones dangle over amps lying flat on the floor. The 'players'
simply give them a push, so they feed back as they pass over the
amps, then calmly walk off stage and let it happen.
Yet,
while the after-show talk described these pieces as
Fluxus-influenced, they're not really provocations or anti-art
stunts. (In the manner of, for example, Christian Marclay's
'Guitar Drag' in which an electric guitar was
dragged behind a lorry.) In Glass' piece, for example, as the
player's hands slip in and out of sync with one another, the
surprising thing is how quickly it becomes musical.
It becomes almost like a magic trick. As the sparse equipment comes
on stage you note there's nothing up their left sleeve, nothing up
their right - then the show begins.
For
Reich's 'Violin Phase,' in which a violinist plays
against a tape recording, they'd gone to the lengths of hiring an
old-style back-in-the-day reel-to-reel recorder - when they probably
could have done the whole thing just by plugging in a laptop. But
it's such a striking image it makes it worth the effort. Minimalism
tended to use the standard instruments of classical music, not the
synthesized hums of Stockhausen or the pumped-up electrification of
rock.
I've
argued before the effects of Minimalism aren't simplistic,
even if the component lines can be. It's perhaps important to
describe just how the lines combine. They might
seem another example of counterpoint, of course a longstanding staple
in music. But there your ears pick up two distinct lines, two sets of
information which get compared in your brain. Instruments with
opposite and complementary timbres are often used, such as bass and
treble sounds, to enhance the separation.
In
Minimalism the sounds are so similar they superimpose on one another
before they even reach you and your ears are no longer quite sure
what they're picking up. During 'Violin Phase',
for example, my ears kept telling my brain there couldn't possible be
two simple repeating patterns producing all those rich intricacies of
sound, and asking my eyes to check again. This was underlaid by the
repeated use of montage effects in the filmshow, with images not
placed alongside but overlaid one another.
But
there's more! While rock gigs can fetishise electrification, with
totemic walls of amps and guitars held aloft, classical recitals
tended to treat that stuff the way you treat the wiring in your house
– best kept out of sight. A modern music, Minimalism didn't hide
the means of amplifying and disseminating itself in the same way.
Originally,
tape recordings of players were in part a pragmatic way to keep the
numbers involved more manageable – a machine saving a human having
to do it. But there's also something inherently optimistic about
Minimalism, and one example would be it's finding a humanity even
inside machines. It's almost the opposite of Kraftwerk's “we are
robot” schtick; instead of allowing for perfect playing each time
and allowing the performers to effectively become robots, it finds
imperfections in the analogue machine sound (never-quite-aligned
timing, tape hiss and so on) and enhances them. (In the manner of
Dali's “mistakes are sacred”, Reich stumbled upon phasing when
trying to align two tape recordings in composing 'It's Gonna
Rain'.)
Which
is of course not so far from to the parallel attitude to the City seen
in the recent 'Pioneers of the Downtown Scene' exhibition of
Seventies New York; “the City becomes a kind of
exoskeleton, augmenting and enhancing us, freeing us from the
limitations imposed by nature.”
Others
saw machines as quite a different symptom. Music snobs would jeer the
repeating patterns involved in this music were “too easy to play”,
as if that somehow invalidated it. (Whereas in the after-show talk,
players commented how challenging and counter-intuitive
phase-shifting can actually be.) The accompanying filmshow and stage
direction (by Netia Jones aka Lightmap) was generally exemplary,
fitting without being dominant or gimmicky, coming up with neat
visual metaphors for the music. One recurrent image it used was of a
typist, which may have been intended to take on the accusation that
the players were no more than temps in a typing pool. But like Patty
Hearst, the more repeatedly she's invoked the more that typist comes
over to our side. When projected over such involving, immersive music
all that typing gets transformed and starts to look like some kind of
Zen exercise.
However,
for all that was achieved there was a downside to leaving downtown.
It's not so much these pieces weren't intended to be performed in
concert halls, for that notion may simply have seemed an
impossibility at the time. But they would have worked better where
they were born - in the lofts and art galleries. In 'Pendulum
Music', had we been sitting on the floor around the
dangling mikes, with them swooping over our heads, it would have been
more direct and involving than seeing the same thing raised and
separated from us on a stage.
Though
the show pressed a narrative of Minimalism advancing uptown and
breaking into the concert halls, it's truer to say the scene
bifurcated at that point. True, Glass and Reich moved away from
process-based pieces such as 'It's Gonna Rain,'
straightened their ties and became (at least in formal terms)
composers bearing scores. But others, such as La Monte Young, instead
came to emphasise the ritualistic aspect of the music – performance
not so much recital as event. You wouldn't count listening to the CD
as any more than documentation, in the way you wouldn't count
watching a video of a sermon as going to church. Significantly, his
work has blurred the line between musical performance and
installation work. (Young refused permission for any of his pieces to
be performed here, though they didn't go into the details why.)
An
example of a performance more in Young's spirit would be Tony Conrad at Tate's Turbine Hall a few years ago, a cross
between gallery event and Modernist warehouse party. (Though notably evenin Reich's recent birthday celebrations at the Barbican, the early pieces were performed in the echoey main hall of the
complex, not the concert chamber.)
It's
strange how important setting can be when hearing music. It feels
almost frivolous to suggest it matters at all - but it clearly does!
As I commented after seeing Acid Mothers Temple, the spacey,
free-form jamming of Sixties-style space rock was made to be played
at festivals or for happenings, and never fits in the box of straight
venues that well.
Similarly,
I first saw Riley's 'In C' played in a stageless
community hall in Brighton sometime in the Nineties, played by a gang
of amateurs to a Saturday night crowd. (Who responded rapturously.)
After all, the score allows individual players great latitude while
still keeping them playing together in the key of... oh, you
guessed... and so is more an invitation to become involved than set
of instructions. Getting carried away as I am wont to, I responded by
imagining it as a manifesto for a harmonious, free society - as much
as any autonomous political pamphlet I've ever read.
Performed
here 'In C' felt more like one of those revivalist
folk clubs, so desperate to preserve something that they forget about
the more important task of keeping it alive. There wasn't the same
sense of the musicians seizing the chance to take off, with the
result that the evening's finale was not a particular highpoint.
Having
complained about the space, I'll go on to feel the width. Bluntly,
pieces could run to the short side. If not length, then indefinite
duration was a frequent feature of Early Minimalism. One participant
joked in the after-show talk about how in those early days this was
taken to such an extreme it became something of an endurance test, as
hours would pass in venues ill-endowed with comfy seating or adequate
heating.
Perhaps
I'm just a sucker for punishment but, in music which largely eschews
dynamics, duration would seem to become a core component. There's
something about duration which becomes mesmeric, which pulls you
deeper and deeper into the music. In Voodoo, the rituals have to take
a while, to give time for the spirits to journey down to our world.
Minimalism, though kinder to chickens, feels kind of similar. (Which
is of course what
I emerged saying after having seen Glass' four-hour 'Music in Twelve
Parts'.)
In
the end I emerged feeling rather half full/ half empty. While I'd
first been lulled by the bravura simplicity of the pieces and the
elegant stage design, my doubts and disenchantments had seemed to
grow as the night progressed. The thought was a good one, there's
something precious and unique about Early Minimalism which means it
shouldn't simply be overwritten by what follows. But as a means to
celebrate all that, the night was mixed.
The
first part of Terry Riley's original 'In C':
But
of course that didn't stop me going back for more...
If
many Minimalist pieces serve you two similar lines until you notice
how much they actually diverge, these two nights were no exception.
This programme of Reich's music was clustered around a new piece,
'Radio Rewrite,' receiving it's world premiere.
After seeing Radiohead's Jonny Greenwood perform a version of his
'Electric Counterpoint' in Poland, an impressed
Reich had composed the work around two Radiohead tracks. Notably, the title plays on the popular term 'radio music' as well as the band's name.
The Guardian recently cited Reich as the antithesis of
Schoenberg's elitist notions of contemporary music (“if it is art,
it is not for all”). Minimalism can have a Marmite reaction among
listeners; some find it enthralling, others unbearable. But those
reactions are direct, almost innate. You won't come to like
Minimalism any more or less by reading up on music theory, you don't
need to prepare for concerts like they're exams.
Reich
himself has often spoken eloquently of the barriers between high and
popular music impeding creative flow, and in the programme speaks of
a “dialogue” between them as music's historical “natural
state.” Which he's clearly right about. But we need a note of
caution – a dialogue is an interchange between two separate people,
taking from each other whatever they find that makes sense to them.
It's not the same thing as the prevalent notion that all music is in
need of being funnelled into something 'popular', like it needs
bringing to “the people” and that's the accepted route. The
result of which is normally some neither-nor hodgepodge.
It's
like when 'radical' theatre companies come up with a hip-hop version
of 'Hamlet' or something; so much of what made the
original is lost in translation, alienating existing fans, while it's
intended audience would rather listen to Wu Tang Clan. (Reader,
please imagine I used a more contemporary hip-hop name there.) People
don't necessarily know much music theory, but they can tell when
they're being patronised.
Plus,
these oft-stated overlaps between Reich and popular music often seem
overstated. In the accompanying programme, Tim Rutherford makes one
of the better comparisons of Reich's Minimalism to dance music. But
he's really talking about a formal similarity more than links, and
the fact remains no dance DJ could get away with playing a Reich
piece. There's little I could find to disagree with in this Guardian piece on Reich's influence, but it noticeably
falls short on naming names. Reich's influence has been pervasive but
indirect, permeated rather than transmitted.
Moreover,
on a more narky point, while I have liked Jonny Greenwood's film
soundtracks and solo compositions I confess I have never seen the
appeal of Radiohead. (Mostly I vote with my feet as soon as I hear
Thom Yorke's whinging voice... but I digress.)
So
soon after my boldly stating Minimalism retained classical
instrumentation, the first half of this show is pretty much devoted
to compositions Reich made not just for electric instruments but
guitars and basses – the staples of rock. Happily however, he shows
general disregard for rockist cliches. Generally people latch onto
the power of rock music, like befriending the big
kid in class, something in which he shows no interest. Reich has
called these “not rock'n'roll [but] chamber music for rock
instruments.”
If
'Electric Counterpoint' sounds like anything from
guitar music it's the softer, lilting rhythms of Afrobeat. (I later
read in the programme Reich was influenced by Central African horn
music.) '2x5' contained sequences of multiple
guitars supplying a kind of morse code note-picking, the nearest rock
equivalent for which I could imagine being the intro to Pink Floyd's
'Shine On You Crazy Diamond.'
Devotees
of Reich's music, however, may have noticed concessions. One was even
heralded in an already-given piece's title – counterpoint.
'Electric Counterpoint' was based not on the
blurring of similar lines, such as in 'Violin Phase',
but overlaid lines. It was mildly reminiscent of the live looping
used by performers like Bela
Emerson. (Though in this case all but the top line were
pre-recorded.)
There
was also something of a hierarchy between the instruments; in
'2x5' twin pianos provided a strumming not unlike
a drum beat, while the guitars moved around over the top. It was a
fairly shallow-sided pyramid compared to orchestral music or the
full-frontal guitars often found in rock bands, but was noticeable
all the same. (None of which necessarily matters. Just saying is
all.)
The
second half then eschewed the electrics. Though 'Radio
Rewrite' was the night's sell, I probably enjoyed it less
than the other pieces. How close the piece is to the originals I
wouldn't be the one to tell you. If anything, from the jagged
staccato the pianos sometimes employed, I'd have guessed it's origins
lay with Kurt Weill. Reich has stated he merely took two Radiohead
melodies as a starting point, the way Stravinsky and Bartok borrowed
from folk music.
The
night was bookended by older pieces, the perennial warm-up
'Clapping Music' and 'Double Sextet.'
Neither of which have a whole lot to do with popular music
influences, and I'd previously heard 'Double Sextet'
during
Reich's afore-mentioned birthday celebrations. But then
they who say they've heard 'Double Sextet' enough
are truly tired of life – and it made the evening's highlight for
me even on it's second serving.
So
why 'Double Sextet' over 'Radio
Rewrite?' As long-term fellow travellers, we naturally
think of Reich and Glass together. But while Glass moved towards the
world of post-minimalism, drawing on a wider sonic palette, Reich has
stuck more to his Minimal roots. Which seems to me each man doing
what works for him. Some artists thrive on collaboration and
cross-fertilisation, others are best being left alone. 'Double
Sextet' works better because Reich being Reich is best, and
conscious efforts to engage with wider traditions merely dilute him.
And I say that as someone who mostly listens to popular music. (Well,
the more unpopular ends of it...)
By
co-incidence, both nights took a tack slightly off-centre, focusing
respectively on Minimalism's early years and on Reich's relationship
with electric instrumentation and popular music. I was drawn to the
first idea more than the second, but on the night enjoyed the second
programme the best. There is probably some kind of moral there...
The
audio only of 'Radio Rewrite'...
Jonny
Greenwood's actual performance of 'Electric
Counterpoint,' to which Reich responded with 'Radio
Rewrite'. Alas, an incomplete recording...
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