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Books related to Max Ernst
Max
Ernst: Dada and the Dawn of Surrealism, by William Camfield. Study
of the development of Dada into Surrealism, via by the career of Max Ernst.
Max
Ernst and Alchemy : A Magician in Search of Myth (Surrealist Revolution)
by M. E. Warlick, Franklin
Rosemont
Une
Semaine De Bonté: A Surrealistic Novel in Collage, by Max
Ernst.
Ernst,
by Jose Maria Faerna. Abradale's Modern masters series.
Max
Ernst, by Edward Quinn. hardcover in a slipcase
Max
Ernst: 1891-1976, by Urlich Bischoff. From Taschen |
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Max Ernst Connection
Max Ernst was an important early
pioneer in collage and a participant in both Dada and Surrealism.
Text from Werner Spies, introduction
to "Max
Ernst: A Retrospective"
"The scandals associated with the name
of Max Ernst during the early post-war period have become legendary. They
were sparked off by radical actions designed to épater les bourgeois
to the utmost. Yet the artist's involvement in this type of activity was
sporadic and temporary. He once explained why this was so during a visit
he and I made in 1967 to the great Dada retrospective in Paris. Being a
Dadaist by profession, he said, was a contradiction in terms. There was
no such thing as an unchanging state of revolution. And to put the spirit
of Dada on exhibition, he continued, was no more than a weak illustration,
like trying to capture the violence of an explosion by presenting the shrapnel.
"Behind this rejection one could sense
a realization that the deep and intense despair that had triggered off
the first post-war works had been rendered harmless to the point of cuteness
by the subsequent, reverential appreciation of Dada. The artistic character
now so matter-of-factly attributed to these works was by no means intended
by Max Ernst and the other members of the Dada groups. This is indicated
by the revolutionary, self-destructive elements that occur in so many of
Ernst's texts. Not only do they pillory and abuse established society,
their hate is equally directed inwards, expressing itself in self-abasement
and a radical renunciation of humanistic values and of belief in utopias.
After a phase of extreme disillusionment which, as all the texts in Bulletin
D or die schammade indicate, could react to the destruction
of war only by reviling and distorting established values all the more,
there gradually emerged works in which the pendulum of destruction began
to swing back. The radicality with which, in the course of a few months
in 1919, Ernst demolished the institutional and definitional parameters
of art both traditional and avant-garde was followed before the year was
out by the building of the world of collage.
"The positive term 'building' is appropriate
in this connection, although it may seem an extraordinary paradox. A few
examples will serve to show what is meant. Max Ernst's rejection of art
was given a stylistically determined form. The works that now emerged were
structured by principles that governed the choice of materials and by constants
that determined their use. From the beginning Ernst knew how to set limits
on the infinite number of possibilities offered by existing materials and
forms. When he invented this new working procedure based on quotation in
1920/21 he immediately recognized both its potential and the dangers it
involved.
"The expressive possibilities of collage
seem so simple that one is tempted to think that anyone could employ them
to equal effect. Yet when one reviews the works of this early period -
the printer's plate prints, say, those compositions made with the aid of
old line blocks found in a printer's shop - it becomes obvious that Max
Ernst's brilliant accomplishment consisted of having developed a syntax
by which the employment of this found material could be controlled. For
all their independence from traditional artistic techniques and the imitation
of nature, it is surprising how much stylistic unity these works evince.
Thanks to his stylistic syntax Ernst created recognizable links between
the works, which form a coherent sequence. Criteria of choice and criteria
of employment are everywhere in evidence. Indeed, the effect of every Max
Ernst image depends largely on the fact that it sets its own limits. One
might add, as a general principle, that the collages and frottages (and
the painting and sculpture derived from these techniques) arc so astonishingly
effective because their creator succeeded in placing conscious restrictions
on the arbitrariness and amorphousness to which such semi-automatic techniques
all too easily lead. Ernst not only created individual, disparate works;
more importantly, with the aid of variations and series, he simultaneously
created the climate in which these works live and breathe. And one should
note that it was a climate his contemporaries found almost unbearably bracing.
In an announcement in die schammade for the portfolio Fiat modes
- pereat ars Max Ernst characterized himself, in an untranslatable
pull on the German word for uterus, Gebarmutter, as 'der gebaervater
methodischen irrsinns', the male mother of methodical madness. If we
take 'methodical' to be the operative term which reveals the essence of
his procedure, we have the precondition for the fascinating developments
that now began.
"These are observations that run entirely
counter to the first radical phase of Cologne Dada, whose attack on aesthetic
conventions placed it closer to Duchamp and Francis Picabia than, say,
to the Dadaists in Berlin. This is why, in dealing with Max Ernst's work,
it is impossible to do without the concept of processing, the conscious
reworking of existing material. It is pointless to speak of anti-art in
this connection, because what we are dealing with, quite objectively, is
the genesis of a superb and far-reaching aesthetic. This is the point at
which Ernst, the artist, comes on the scene. We must face up to a paradox:
his early work had no direction, and was a far cry from his subsequent
Dada activities. His first paintings, done within the orbit of August Macke,
the Sturm gallery and the Cologne Sonderbund exhibition,
were as planless and stylistically inconsistent as his Dada period was
definitely articulated, a world of stylistically and morally defined resistance.
"Again, the crux is this: Max Ernst's
careful selection of seminal imagery employed in collages and all the variants
of collage, and the formal criteria which determined the composition of
the printer's plate prints, rubbings, overpaining,s montages of photographic
positives and paste-ups of wood engravings all indicate the primacy of
control. Everywhere we look, we find invariables that oppose the seemingly
unlimited availability of the material, that place considerable restrictions
on its character and use.
"Let us try to define a few of the constants
of this pictorial syntax. The most important is that Max Ernst's collages,
for all their strangeness, strive for overall coherence and technical plausibility.
This 'plausible' imagery, unlike the papiers colles of Picasso and Georges
Braque, depends on an expurgation of the visible difference between artist's
hand and non-artistic quotation. The joins and overlappings had to be concealed
from the viewer. This is why Ernst frequently published his composite imagery
only in printed form, in photographic reproduction or in versions later
touched up with watercolour. Thanks to these tactics of concealment he
succeeded in presenting collage as that which he thought it should be:
a completely developed and autonomous system in which the origin of the
separate elements is submerged in the final, total image. He was out to
produce irritating imagery in which, as in the perfect crime, every clue
to its identity had been erased. The joins between the collage elements,
moreover, were not so much physical as mental in nature. The hinges linking
one piece of source material with another had to remain invisible, which
also explains why leaps in scale tended to be avoided. These would have
given too much emphasis to the original meaning of the elements, upsetting
the coherence of the final image. It is easy to see that such strict conditions
limited the use of collage material to a much grater extent than is initially
apparent.
"The collages require a redefinition
of categories, since the fabrication of such imagery is bound up with a
completely innovative notion of tradition and with an extraordinarily intense
involvement with illustrations. A literal quotation of the illustrations
employed would obviously contradict the meaning of the new image constructed
from them, and also the circumstance that this new image must become part
of a defined stylistic context. Considerations of this kind served Max
Ernst as a guideline in making his selection from the plethora of intrinsically
neutral material available to him.
"The laws of Dada - this seeming contradiction
in terms is one of the most consequential results of a systematic investigation
of the aesthetics of collage in Max Ernst's work. A glance around his studio
will illustrate what I mean. Everywhere you looked there were stacks of
illustrated books, scraps of wallpaper, raw materials of every description
which the artist built into his works right up to the end of his career.
When one leafs through the nineteenth-century folio volumes, illustrated
with wood engravings, which were one of his favourite sources, one is surprised
to find that he proceeded differently from the way one would have assumed
in view of the enigmatic imagery that resulted from his use of them. Spectacular
depictions with Dadaist or surreal qualities of their own interested him
hardly at all. Instead, it was the banal, insignificant, run-of-the-mill
illustrations that inspired him to pictorial statements of the most dazzling
kind.
"In the collages various levels of meaning
coexist on a single pictorial plane. Confronted with this composite imagery
we have no choice but to apply the notion, familiar from traditional art,
of the picture as a unity, a totality. Looking at pictures has accustomed
us to considering the motifs that appear within an image as a whole. If
we were not compelled by the coherent nature of the collages to employ
this simultaneous perception, we might be able to perceive the elements
from which they are constructed individually and divide the enigmatic image
into intelligible parts. This involves us in a continual clash between
overall perception and a need for interpretation that fastens on one detail
after another; and this clash, in turn, is the source of that unique mood
produced by any confrontation with a Max Ernst image - elements that are
intelligible in isolation become ambivalent on the level of composition
and communication.
"This discussion of his materials and
their processing enables us to define the categories that determined what
could enter his imagery and, by the same token, the criteria according
to which certain materials were excluded from use in collage. After all,
the principles governing the choice and employment of material also define
the artist's rejection of an unlimited range of combinations of information
in collage, what Theodor Adorno once called its 'bad boundlessness'. It
was Ernst's refusal to accept information at random that led to the recognizability
of his collages as his own. His resistance to a world captured in visual
media was the basis for his style. For style is not merely a technical
category, but all ethical one. As Joe Bousquet once put it: 'For all of
the liberties he helped us conceive of, for every notion he discredited,
Max Ernst paid the highest price. His life withstood continual tension
between a creative furore that nothing could contain and an extremely rigorous
method based on almost incredible demands.'" |