Showing posts with label Russian avant-garde. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Russian avant-garde. Show all posts

Tuesday, January 25, 2022

Slapstick and the Soviet avant-garde: an interview with Owen Hatherley

In the aftermath of the Russian Revolution, the Soviet avant –garde looked to Hollywood. Rob Sharp discuss this unlikely story with Owen Hatherley  





 Soviet artists the Stenberg Brothers' poster for SEP, featuring a "Daily News building-style tower".RS: Was there an equivalent of biomechanics in the west?


Buster Keaton drives away his newly built house in One Week (1920). Owen Hatherley's engaging and provocative The Chaplin Machine, his latest book, is an erudite historical investigation into how, in the aftermath of the Russian Revolution, the Soviet avant-garde looked to Hollywood film, including the work of Charlie Chaplin, Buster Keaton and Harold Lloyd. They saw not just slapstick comedy, but something that spoke to their own sensibilities over work, aesthetics and performance.

At a similar time, they also drew on the writings of industrial theorist Frederick Taylor – attempting to improve workers' performance using scientific principles – and Henry Ford. "As a rule, these are treated as rather separate phenomena," writes Hatherley, of these two cultural themes. Though so ideologically different, the Soviets could see elements of the US that they could admire in both ideas, striving to pull together "Americanism in technology, Bolshevism in politics [and] slapstick in everyday life".  

As with any cultural message, the tale was distorted in the telling. Hatherley's work, adapted from his doctoral thesis, tells how many in the USSR saw the US as a "gigantic act of collective dreaming," more akin to their own ideals than no doubt it was. 

By moving through cinema, design, architecture, and politics he succeeds in uniting these two poles, rewriting conventional understanding of both modernism and this unique point in Soviet history. Hatherley explained to openDemocracy some of the book's key ideas. 

Rob Sharp: To what extent did serendipity and miscommunication play a role in Soviet appropriation of US filmmaking aesthetics in the contexts you describe?

Owen Hatherley: I don't know about serendipity, but miscommunication was endemic. This is at the start of a mass media age. But it's still just beginning. You have mass distribution of Hollywood films but other than that the dissemination of American culture was fairly rudimentary. 

The most interesting versions of American culture are always those which get it wrong. The Beatles are more interesting than Johnny Halliday. The direct reproduction of the American archetype is always pretty tedious, and you can see that in British music. The ways in which it's endlessly got American music wrong have been interesting. You could make an analogy between that and cinema and theatre in the USSR, and the way they interpreted American cinema.

One thing filmmakers were well aware of was what they did and didn't want from American film. They liked fast cutting, they liked action, special effects, all things which lots of art cinema people think are ghastly. The slow take world that now passes for artistic ambition would have been utter anathema to these people. Eisenstein would have hated Béla Tarr with a fucking passion. They would have thought Michael Bay was better than Béla Tarr, I can say that for certain.

Eisenstein would have hated Béla Tarr with a fucking passion. They would have thought Michael Bay was better than Béla Tarr, I can say that for certain.

They also didn't like the politics, the explicit racist politics of Birth of a Nation or the more subtle confederate politics of Buster Keaton's The General. They saw that and didn't like it. They didn’t like happy endings and didn't like stars. One of the big changes in 1930s Soviet cinema – roughly between 1930 and 1934 – is a shift towards those American things. Big budgets, musicals, happy endings, stars. They are not necessarily bad films, but they accept much more of American cinema.

But if you look at something like at the acceptance of Taylorism, which is really at the heart of the book in many ways, I don't think they knew to what degree they misunderstood it. There's a wonderful anecdote. One of the American painter and engraver Louis Lozowick going to the USSR and Russians asking: "Do you have biomechanics over there?" And him replying: "No, what are you talking about?" All of these things they thought of as American, the actual American was telling them: "No, this is you". There is also a great story about an emissary from the Ford Motor Company being shown a biomechanics troupe and him saying: "This has nothing to do with what we're doing." And they thought it did. People like Meyerhold, Eisenstein, they really thought this was in the continuum of scientific management. And for actual scientific management, it was meaningless.  

OH: Perhaps  athletics, aerobics. The fact that aerobics doesn't happen until the 1970s is probably telling. It's very difficult to explain what biomechanics was. Especially since we don't have any film footage of the Meyerhold theatre. The nearest we have is the acting style in the early Eisenstein films or the films of Kozintsev and Trauberg. It's a very strange thing which on the one hand is circus-like, which aspires to be mechanized and industrial, but also quite aerobic. And of course it had a huge theoretical justification which went into it, which one is at liberty to find convincing or not convincing. I don't find it particularly convincing.

RS: So it was just a form of performance?

OH: You can also link it to Eisenstein's theories about the Montage of Attractions. And people forget that attractions part. This is circus attractions, that's what he's talking about. If you watched people doing these things it was meant to have this shocking affect which Eisentstein reckons the Montage of Attractions has. I don't know if it's plausible.

RS: What would be a good contemporary equivalent of what the Soviets were doing in appropriating these aesthetics?

OH: One of the weird things about Soviet cinema in the 1920s is it's one of the few examples anywhere of the state sponsored avant-garde. The people they were corresponding with were in France and Germany. Hans Richter was trying to scrape the budget together to make a 20-minute short. Eisenstein was given massive resources and a cast of thousands. That ability to do things on that scale is really unique in the twentieth century. Like many things about the Soviet avant-garde it's unique and probably unrepeatable. Or unrepeatable without the kind of political upheaval seen in the aftermath of 1917. But scaling it down somewhat I do think that music has several examples of that kind of misunderstanding.

More :

https://www.opendemocracy.net/en/slapstick-and-soviet-avant-garde/  

 

Saturday, January 8, 2022

Mirskontsa (Worldbackwards)

 


Natalia Goncharova, cover for Mirskontsa (Worldbackwards) 
Authors: Aleksei Kruchenykh, Velimir Khlebnikov, Moscow, 1912

#NataliaGoncharova #lithographs#Mirskontsa #illustratedbook#AlekseiKruchenykh#VelimirKhlebnikov #Zaum #poetry #book#Handmadebook 

Tuesday, November 9, 2021

Το μαύρο τετράγωνο και η σουπρεματιστική φάρσα /“Combat de Nègres dans une cave pendant la nuit”.


Το μαύρο τετράγωνο και  η σουπρεματιστική φάρσα  (“Combat de Nègres dans une cave pendant la nuit” )

 

Ειδική βιβλιογραφία, σημειώσεις

Referencesworks citednotes

 

Τέχνη στο συγκείμενο (Art in context 

Η σχολή του SlapstickSlapstick School

ΑΣΚΤ -Χειμερινό εξάμηνο/ Εαρινό εξάμηνο

Αμφιθέατρο νέας βιβλιοθήκης,  Πειραιώς 256

Κωστής Βελώνης

 

 

 

Emslander, Fritz, Gorjatschewa, Tatjana, Kraus, Karola. Von der Fläche zum RaumMalewitsch und die frühe Moderne: From Surface to Space. Malewitsch and Early Modern Art: Malevich & Early Modern Art , Köln : Walther König, 2009.

 

 

AllaisAlphonse.  Album-Primovrilesque, 1897 

http://www.ubu.com/historical/allais/index.html

http://ubu.com/historical/allais/Allais-Alphonse_Album-Primovrilesque_1897.pdf

 

 

Bobrinskaia, Ekaterina. On the threshold of the cosmos: the instict of lighteness and cosmic consciousness in The Cosmos of the Russian avantgarde: Art and Space Exploration, 1900-1930 , Thessaloniki : State Museum of Contemporary Art, Costakis Collection,  2010 

 

 

Βελώνης, Κωστής. “Κάτω από τον αστερισμό του Malewicz”, Αυγή της Κυριακής , 14/5/17

http://avgi-anagnoseis.blogspot.gr/2017/05/blog-post_44.html#more

 

 

Βελώνης, Κωστής.  Σκέψεις για το αντι-μανιφέστο μιας Σοσιαλιστικής Γλυπτικής

https://www.culturenow.gr/kwsths-velwnhs-skepseis-gia-to-anti-manifesto-mias-sosialistikhs-glyptikhs/

 

 

Birnholz, Alan C. El Lissitzky's “Prouns”, Part I., Art Forum, October 69  

https://www.artforum.com/print/196908/el-lissitzky-s-prouns-part-i-36474

 

 

Birnholz, Alan C. El Lissitzky's “Prouns”, Part II., Art Forum, November 69 

https://www.artforum.com/print/196909/el-lissitzky-s-prouns-part-ii-36467

 

 

DenHoed, Andrea, The Paper-Airplane Collector, photo by Jason Fulford, New Yorker Magazine, October 5, 2015 Issue. 

https://www.newyorker.com/magazine/2015/10/05/the-paper-airplane-collector

https://mossandfog.com/an-historical-collection-of-found-paper-airplanes/

 

 

Dunne, Carey, Art Historians Find Racist Joke Hidden Under Malevich’s “Black Square”, Nov.13, 2015 

https://hyperallergic.com/253361/art-historian-finds-racist-joke-hidden-under-malevichs-black-square/

 

 

Fludd, Robert - Macrocosm Microcosm, 1617

     “The Great Darkness. And thus, to Infinity”  

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kLNUx_ft0W4

 

 

Jason, Stopa. Kathleen Bradford with Jason Stopa," The Brooklyn Rail, April 2, 2012.

https://brooklynrail.org/2012/04/art/katherine-bradford-with-jason-stopa

 

 

 

Kabakov, Ilya and Emilia. The Man Who Flew Into  Space From His Apartment. http://www.kabakov.net/installations/2019/9/15/the-man-who-flew-into-space-from-his-apartment

Kiaer   Christina.  Imagine No Possessions: The Socialist Objects of Russian Constructivism Cambridge: The MIT Press, 2008.

 

 

Kraus Karola, Gorjatschewa Tatjana, Franz  Erich.  From Surface to Space: Malevich & Early Modern Art / Von Der Flache Zum Raum : Malewitsch Unde Die Fruhe Moderne, Koln : Walther Konig, 2008.

 

 

LatourBruno. Ουδέποτε υπήρξαμε Μοντέρνοι. Δοκίμιο συμμετρικής ανθρωπολογίας, μτφρ. Φώτης Τερζάκης, Αθήνα:   Σύναλμα, 2000.

 

 

MalevichKazimir. Η τεμπελιά, πραγματική αλήθεια του ανθρώπου. Σουπρεματισμός με είκοσι σχέδια του ζωγράφου, μτφρ- επιμ. Βασίλης Τομανάς, Θεσσαλονίκη : Νησίδες 1997.

 

 

Μαχαίρα, Ελένη. Το μαύρο τετράγωνο του Καζιμίρ Μαλέβιτς, Αθήνα: Στιγμή, 2011.

 

 

Nakov,  Andrei. «Άνθρωποι και μορφές σε «ελεύθερη πτήση». Στοιχεία σύγκλησης μεταξύ του Malevich και του Tsiolkovskii», Η Κατάκτηση του αέρα, μια περιπέτεια στην τέχνη του 20ου αιώνα, Θεσσαλονίκη : Κρατικό Μουσείο Σύγχρονης Τέχνης, 2003  

 

 

Noever, Peter (επιμ), Alexander Rodchenko: Inventar des Raumes/ Inventory of Space, MAK Museum/ Walther Konig, Koln, 2006.

 

 

Παπανικολάου, Μιλτιάδης (επιμ.), Πίσω από το Μαύρο Τετράγωνο, Θεσσαλονίκη :  Κρατικό Μουσείο Σύγχρονης Τέχνης,  2002. 

 

 

Shatskikh, Aleksandra, Inscribed Vandalism: The Black Square at One Hundred

https://www.e-flux.com/journal/85/155475/inscribed-vandalism-the-black-square-at-one-hundred/

 

 

Σινιόσογλου, Νικήτας.  Αλλόκοτος Ελληνισμός,  Αθήνα :  Κίχλη,  2016.

 

      Vakar, I.A., Kazimir Malevich: The Black Square, Moscow: The State Tretyakov Gallery, 2015.

 

 

Kabakov, Ilya.  "The Man Who Flew into Space from his Apartment", 1985.

https://kostisvelonis.blogspot.com/2019/11/the-man-who-flew-into-space-from-his.html

 

Klein, Yves. Le Saut dans le vide, 1960.

http://www.yvesklein.com/fr/oeuvres/view/643/le-saut-dans-le-vide/  

 

Vujoševic, Tijana.  Modernism and the making of the Soviet New Man. Manchester University Press, 2017.Project MUSE.muse.jhu.edu/book/67334. 

 

WeilSimoneΗ βαρύτητα και η χάρη, μτφ. Αντιγόνη ΒρυώνηΑθήναΕυθύνη, 1989.

 

 

Danish museum wants artist to pay back money after producing blank canvasses

https://www.bbc.com/news/world-europe-58746701

 

 

Malevich's Black Square under X-ray: A dialogue on racerevolution and art history. Khadija von Zinnenburg Carroll and Dina Gusejnova in conversation, Third Text, 9 September 2019 http://www.thirdtext.org/domains/thirdtext.com/local/media/images/medium/Malevich_conversation_PDF_1.pdf

 

 

Five ways to look at Malevich's Black Square, 

https://www.tate.org.uk/art/artists/kazimir-malevich-1561/five-ways-look-malevichs-black-square

Wednesday, July 21, 2021

Thursday, May 7, 2020

Slapstick Avant- garde


 Slapstick Avant-garde  


Κωστής Βελώνης, Αδεξιότητα και νεωτερικότητα  (We Are All Clowns)
Clumsiness and Modernity (We Are All Clowns) Course 
ΑΣΚΤ -Athens School of Fine Arts (ASFA) Winter/Spring Semester 
Αμφιθέατρο νέας βιβλιοθήκης,  Πειραιώς 256

Βιβλιογραφία, σημειώσεις 
Bibliography / REF/ Works Cited / Films / Performances 

Brater,  EnochThe 'Absurd' Actor in the Theatre of Samuel Beckett, Educational Theatre Journal, Vol. 27, No. 2 (May, 1975), pp. 197-207 https://www.jstor.org/stable/3206113
Berger John, Some notes about the art of fallingCharlie Chaplin , Sight and Sound Magazine, 16 April, 2020 

Βογιατζόγλου Αθηνά . Η διαδρομή του Σαρλώ  στη Νεοελληνική Ποίηση (1927-1957). Τα ποιητικά, τευχ. 34, Ιουνιος 2019

https://tapoiitika.wordpress.com/πρωτοσέλιδα-άρθρα/η-διαδρομη-του-σαρλω-στη-νεοελληνικη-π/

BuñuelLuis Σουρεαλιστικά κείμενα και κινηματογράφος , μτφρ. Ζωγράφου Βιβή εκδοσεις Καθρέπτης , 2000.

 Crafton, Donald,  Pie and Chase: Gag, Spectacle and Narrative in Slapstick Comedy, in The Cinema of Attractions Reloaded, (ed.) by Wanda Strauven, Amsterdam University Press, 2006.
 https://www.jstor.org/stable/j.ctt46n09s.25 
EisensteinSergei.Film Essays and a Lecture.(ed) Leyda, Jay,  Princeton University Press, 2014. https://muse.jhu.edu/chapter/1319372/pdf
Flaig, Paul, Lacan's Harpo, Cinema Journal, Vol. 50, No. 4 (Summer 2011), pp. 98-116
https://www.jstor.org/stable/41240737
 Hall, David, Reviving a Forgotten Pyrotechnical Art Form: Pyrotechnics and Twentieth-Century Performance Art  Leonardo, Vol. 24, No. 5 (1991), pp. 531-534 
https://www.jstor.org/stable/1575655
 Hatherley, Owen,  The Chaplin MachineSlapstickFordism and the International Communist AvantGarde. , London : Pluto press , 2016
https://www.plutobooks.com/blog/comic-anti-humanism-the-chaplin-machine/

Keaton, Buster. How To Make A Genuine Silent Comedy Pie (For Throwing!)
https://silentology.wordpress.com/2014/12/05/how-to-make-a-genuine-silent-comedy-pie-for-throwing/

Kerr, Walter, The Silent Clowns (New York: Knopf, 1980)

Κοτζιούλας Γιώργος, Ενας φοιτητής βλέπει Σαρλώ
http://selidodeiktes.greek-language.gr/literas/501

Κούρτης Βαγγέλης,  Buster Keaton, επιμΤάκης  Καραγιάννης Αθήνα : Αιγόκερως, 2003. 

Κολοβός, Νίκος. Το κωμικό στον κινηματογράφο, Θεσσαλονίκη: Λέσχη Φίλων Κινηματογράφου Οθόνη,  1987 
Knopf, Robert. The Theater and Cinema of Buster Keaton. Princeton: Princeton UP, 1999. Print. 
Madden, David, Harlequin's Stick, Charlie's Cane
 Film Quarterly, Vol. 22, No. 1, Tenth Anniversary Issue (Autumn, 1968), pp. 10-26 
https://www.jstor.org/stable/1210036Accessed: 28-03-2020 22:13 UTC 

McKee, Al. Buster's HatFilm Quarterly , Vol. 57, No. 4 (Summer 2004), pp. 31-34
 https://www.jstor.org/stable/10.1525/fq.2004.57.4.31

Meade, Marion,  Buster KeatonCut to the Chase: A Biography, HarperCollins, 1995 
  
Solomon William. On Comic Modernism: Impersonality in Eliot and Keaton 
Mosaic: an interdisciplinary critical journal, Volume 50, Number 2, June 2017, pp. 205-222 
https://muse.jhu.edu/article/663698 

Turvey, Malcolm, Comedic Modernism,  October 2017 NO. 160, 5-29 
https://doi.org/10.1162/OCTO_a_00289

Tsivian, Yuri. “Charlie Chaplin and His Shadows: On Laws of Fortuity in Art,” Critical Inquiry 40, no. 3 (Spring 2014) pp. 71-84 https://www.jstor.org/stable/10.1086/677331

Verrone  William. Humor and the AvantGarde, The Journal of Popular Culture · Volume 47, Issue 4 2014
https://doi.org/10.1111/jpcu.12157

Films / performances 

Buster Keaton's Clips : Three Ages, Cops, Day Dreams, Sherlock Jr., One Week, Hard Luck, Neighbors, The General, Steamboat Bill, Jr., Seven Chances, Our Hospitality, The Bell Boy

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=frYIj2FGmMA



Film (1965) Directed by Samuel Beckett, Alan Schneider
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZMa-3Nsv9Kw

 

Buster Keaton - « Seven Chances », 1925

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jXNLXqB6KhI

 

Buster Keaton 's The Electric House (1922)

https://www.dailymotion.com/video/x6j5502


 

A House Falls,  Buster Keaton

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FN2SKWSOdGM

Deadpan,  Steve McQueen

http://theatricaltheory.blogspot.com/p/blog-page.html

 

A Night At The Opera: Crowded Cabin Scene

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8ZvugebaT6Q



Duck soup, Peanuts Scene ,  Marx Brothers, 1933 

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Emlxs7_0LEg


 The Mirror Scene , Marx Brothers, 1933 

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VKTT-sy0aLg



The Mirror Scene - Duck Soup (7/10) Movie CLIP (1933)

Charlie Chaplin. A day’s pleasure, 1919

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4v5bsOInIDI

'Explosive' Swiss artist Roman Signer 

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3FuH0yL29Z4

 

Installations by Roman Signer

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Sk8125jdXoY

Roman Signer .... Tombés du ciel (fin)


Roman Signer - Tracks ARTE

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nIEoyQZku6U

 

ENTR'ACTE | René Clair (1924) 

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2kGOIysVl8I&list=RD2kGOIysVl8I&start_radio=1&t=626

Le Ballet Mecanique 1924, Fernand Léger, Dudley Murphy

 

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wi53TfeqgWM

 


Mon Oncle de Jacques Tati : Bande annonce


 

 

Jacques Tati Mon Oncle 1958




Jaques Tati - Mon Oncle (Kitchen Scene)


https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LE9t98Gox60


David Lynch and Tati on Mon Oncle




The Extraordinary Adventures of Mr. West in The Land of The Bolsheviks, dir.  Lev Kuleshov. 1924 

 

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wVeg8shVTiQ

Laurel and Hardy - The Battle of the Century (1927) - The Pie Fight

Peter Land, The Staircase 

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KjkuBnfE398

Hans Richter, Vormittagsspuk (Ghosts Before Breakfast) 1927-28

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=523oJgWxJME

Martin Kersels: Tumble Room

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IKJs0yigFLo

Peter Fischli and David Weiss ,Der Lauf der Dinge (The Way Things Go,) 1987. 

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fXo7YUP-J3w



An Introduction to Peter Fischli David Weiss: How to Work Better
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=T7tpMk44otU

David le Viseur and Michael PfitznerDer aufhaltsame Lauf der Dinge, 2016.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vJ_ZY_cM1t4

“Equilibrios” de Peter Fischli y David Weiss

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gzSsFIjaylI