Archive for 12/01/2011 - 01/01/2012

Joan Miró: Selected Writings and Interviews

Saturday, December 31, 2011 § 0

Joan Miró: The Personal Mytho(poetics) of a Surrealist Painter whose Poem/Paintings 
Abstract the Human Form into Metaphor

A Book Review by 
David Detrich

Joan Miró: Selected Writings and Interviews (1992) edited by Margit Rowell is a collection of essays, interviews, and poetic writings by one of the most imaginative artists of the 20th Century with poetry that develops the literary themes and personal mythology of his artwork. Joan Miró followed the Surrealist movement from his days in Montroig creating an intuitive approach to the Surrealist object with conceptual sketches, pencil drawings, oil and mixed media paintings, and tableaux-poèmes. He was influenced by ancient history in his drawing of small metaphorical creatures, abstract animals, fanciful astronomical constellations, with appreciation for eroticism, and love for the human form. Joan Miró made numerous pencil drawings and oil paintings which express a Surrealist sense of humor in the abstraction of the human figure, and the childlike forms of a simplistic perspective. Joan Miró: Selected Writings and Interviews shows that Joan Miró followed the literary trend of Pablo Picasso, Jean Arp, and other artists who were inspired by The Diary of Anaïs Nin (1931-66), which was an outstanding example of creativity in the middle decades of 20th Century literature. Joan Miró developed poetic writing in his diaries which are expressed as literary titles and concrete images which enhance his drawings, sculpture, and paintings with the thoughtful intertextuality that makes his Surrealist works interesting to the 21st Century reader.

In 1917 an exhibition of modernist paintings in Barcelona introduced Joan Miró to the work of his contemporaries, and his early pencil drawings show the influence of the Cubists. At the Dalmau galleries Joan Miró learned of the avant garde painters and writers of his time.

Here Miró saw his first French Cubist paintings and encountered Dada, which he would always say was a major influence in his life, representing a kind of freedom he had not imagined possible before.
                                                          Joan Miró: Selected 
                                                          Writings and Interviews
                                                          Margit Rowell

Joan Miró was inspired by poetic phrases which he used in his Tableaux-Poèmes (Poem-Paintings) 1924-27, constructing a painting around the poetic phrase that he wished to express. Here he developed his personal mythology into poetic thought in the Surrealist genre of poetry/paintings.

                 Stars in the form of Snails' Genitals
                 Photo: This is the Color of my Dreams
                 The body of my dark-haired woman
                 because I love her
                 like my pussycat dressed in salad-green
                 like hail
                 it's all the same
                 Oh, one of those gentlemen who did all that!
                                                         Poem-Painting 1924        
                                                         Joan Miró
                          
The poetic writings of Joan Miró reveal an original approach to the Surrealist text and poem with his development of a complex Surrealist object, and the use of metaphor that takes the meaning of the sentence to its limits: where the surreality of logic verging on non-sense occurs, which creates a sense of the marvelous, the childlike, and the magical. In his Notebook of Poems 1936-39 Joan Miró has developed the erotic themes which make up a lifetime of experience into a poetic work which develops the Surrealist esthetic of characterization.

                     rose petal salad...
                     dressed 
                     rosy pink yoghurt
                     ...a frog 
                     chaste-virgin-maid-holy-and-chaste
                     sits down beside the conductor.
                     A beggar picks up
                     blue coins from the sidewalk
                     and a naked dancer with red hair
                     runs after violet fish
                     in the deep blue Seine.
                     That, my good man, is life.
                                                          Paris, 26-XI-36
                                                          Joan Miró

Joan Miró has an enlightened attitude towards life, and his poetic work is a philosophical interpretation of the themes which create an inter(text)uality with the present. The narrator feels a sense of envy as he reads about the erotic experiences which create the psychogenesis of a young person's creative identity: a summarizing of life. This is an idea that Arshile Gorky developed in his erotic painting Summation 1947, where life is a summation of romantic experience.

In Paris Pablo Picasso was writing his poetic works in the 1930s following the example of Anaïs Nin, whose The Diary of Anaïs Nin (1931-66) and Cities of the Interior (1959) were significant events in the development of 20th Century literature. Joan Miró joined the trend with his Notebook of Poems 1936-39, a series of poetic works which show an original approach to Surrealist writing.

The flaming tree of the peacock's tail that bites the snouts of bats smiling before the charred corpse of my grandmother who was buried by a dance of transparent glass nightingales with rocket wings who dance the sardana around the phosphorescent carcass while pecking with the gold of their pincers the metal seeds of silver cypresses rushing down in waterfalls from the grandmother's big toe.
     soaring flame of passionate love spiral whirling towards the ether of the inaccessible ideal tragedy of man.
                                                            2-X-37
                                                            Joan Miró

Joan Miró is writing in a style similar to Pablo Picasso, Jean Arp, and other artists who followed the trend of poetic writing in the 1930s, while developing the themes of death, the idea of a carcass, and the idea of a waterfall, which we see in the works of Raymond Federman and my own Surrealist novel-in-progress The Convergence of Two Narrative Lines Ascending. Joan Miró is teaching contemporary writers not to feel too disturbed by the idea of death, and to consider the metaphysical significance of life.

The style of Miró's poetry echoes Surrealist poetry at its best, in particular that of Benjamin Péret and Robert Desnos, the two poets to whom Miró felt closest and who reciprocally had immediately understood his paintings of the 1920s.
                                                          Notebook of Poems, 
                                                          1936-39
                                                          Margit Rowell

In an interview with Georges Duthuit for Cahiers d'Art 1937, Joan Miró expresses his esthetic theory of the poem/painting, an idea which has produced the long intellectual poetic titles to his paintings which exemplify the Surrealist trend of the marvelous.

I'd trade in a thousand literati for one poet! And I make no distinction between painting and poetry. I have sometimes illustrated my canvasses with poetic phrases, and vice versa. The Chinese, those great lords of the spirit—isn't that what they did?
                                                          "Where are You 
                                                           Going, Miró?"
                                                           Georges Duthuit

Joan Miró: Selected Writings and Interviews (1992) edited by Margit Rowell is a collection of letters, poems, and interviews that reveal a creative approach to Surrealist writing by Joan Miró, an artist who took the themes of inter(text)uality seriously, even calling himself by the female first name Joan, a concept that originated with Rrose Selavy, the alter-ego of Marcel Duchamp, where an artist creates an imaginary identity that may cross the lines of gender, so that he, or she, can explore the idea of trans-sexual role playing.  

What fascinates the readers of innovative fiction are the contributions of Joan Miró to the genre of Surrealist writing, with the assemblage of ideas into a composite Surrealist object with the use of dashes, and the long titles to his paintings, where the poetic thought expresses the conceptual theories that accompany the artwork. 

Finally if one wishes to continue the study of Joan Miró's poetic writing there is Joan Miro: Catalan Notebooks : Unpublished Drawings and Writings (1977) by Gaetan Picon, where the personal mythology and abstract images of the artist/poet are developed into Surrealist artwork by one of the most intelligent, original, and prolific artists of the 20th Century.

David Detrich lives in the Upper Peninsula of Michigan where he has just completed The Convergence of Two Narrative Lines Ascending, an ultramodern Surrealist novel written in minimal squares. This year he is working on Dream the Presence of the Circular Breast Starfish Topography, a monumental Surrealist novel written with innovative typographical design. His first novel Big Sur Marvels & Wondrous Delights (2001) is available from Amazon. He is the editor of Innovative Fiction Magazine and Surrealist Star Clustered Illuminations.

Liberty or Love! by Robert Desnos

Thursday, December 8, 2011 § 0

Liberty or Love!: The Surrealist Novel as an Erotic Encounter with the Meta(phor)ical Esthetics of Poetic Subjectivity  

A Book Review by 
David Detrich                                                      

Liberty or Love! (1924) by Robert Desnos is a Surrealist novel that embodies the true spirit of romance in the Parisian style, as the narrator Corsair Sanglot pursues the enchanting Louise Lame through Paris on an erotic adventure from the Rue des Pyramids to the Bois de Boulogne. The narrator follows her through the streets as she gradually undresses, leaving her cami-knickers for him to find, and walking towards the Bois de Boulogne, where she is finally naked under her fur coat. This is Surrealist romance at its finest, with the promenade of Louise Lame symbolizing her interactions with the world. Liberty or Love! is a novel of Surrealist eroticism, and continues in the tradition of Soluble Fish (1924) by André Breton, where the narrators write in poetic prose about their youthful encounters with the marvelous.

Liberty or Love! begins with a rhymed poem by Arthur Rimbaud called The Night-Watch (1923), which looks to the future of an aging character who tries to regain his youthful energies in a world that is troubled by unrest, as he perceives "Breasts to swell thoughts of love or, if not, death." This line may have inspired the title of Liberty of Love!, and without love life does not seem worth living. The narrator of The Night-Watch will see "...a girl swim through the breaking waves of light Till love be reconciled with liberty," a theme that Robert Desnos has developed in his Surrealist novel.

Liberty or Love! begins with the chapter called The Depths of the Night which introduces the narrator Corsair Sanglot whose swashbuckling name is reminiscent of the narrator of Aurora (1926-27) by Michel Leiris. The narrator of the novel writes with the skill of a poet, a trend which makes the Surrealist novel worthy of critical attention from a 21st Century perspective in which the innovative novel has become more creative with the use of unpunctuated prose in an expanded metaphorical sentence structure.

When I reached the street, the leaves were falling from the trees. The staircase behind me was no more than a firmament sprinkled with stars among which I could clearly distinguish the footsteps of a certain woman...
                                                           Liberty or Love!
                                                           Robert Desnos

The poetic image of the staircase is an artistic idea that could be realized by painting a staircase blue, and sprinkling glitter on the wet paint to give it a starlike effect. The woman is Louise Lame, whom he pursues through the streets of Paris along the Rue de Rivoli past the Place de L'Etoile, where he finds her cami-knickers. She begins to strip naked under her fur coat on a walk through Paris to the Bois de Boulogne, where she is finally naked under her fur coat.

How many times, in stormy weather or by the light of the moon, did I get up to contemplate by the gleam of a log-fire, or that of a match, or a glow-worm, those memories of women who had come to my bed, completely naked apart from stockings and high-heeled slippers retained out of respect for my desire...
                                                            Liberty or Love!
                                                            Robert Desnos

Robert Desnos writes with insight into eroticism, while foreshadowing events in the evolution of Surrealism into the 21st Century with the glow of a match as a theme that reminds us of the presence of the narrator, while his writing style is similar to the soft focus techniques used by Man Ray in the film L'Étoile de Mer (1928), influenced by the film techniques of the Italian Futurists, who feature silent black and white films of a woman's feet in romantic situations.

Retracing my steps and going along under the arcades of the Rue de Rivoli, I finally saw Louise Lame walking ahead of me.
                                                            Liberty or Love!
                                                            Robert Desnos

The Bois de Boulogne is a large park in Paris with nature trails running to an ancient stone structure that may be an archeological remnant of an ancient civilization, with stone steps ascending to a rock structure, and a reflective river with park benches for lovers.

Naked, now she was naked under the fur coat.
                                                           Liberty or Love!
                                                           Robert Desnos

This is the height of erotic adventure, and Liberty or Love! is a novel that describes the Surrealist street theatre of Paris, continuing the tradition of romantic relationships found in Soluble Fish (1924) by André Breton, with his walk through the Paris streets. For the reader who is interested in this genre there is Flesh Unlimited: Surrealist Erotica (2000) edited by Alexis Lykiard, which features erotic works by Guillaume Apollinare and Louis Aragon, and you might also consider erotic works by Benjamin Péret and Man Ray which appear in 1929 and Mad Balls: Surrealist Erotica (2009). Plus there are numerous examples of Surrealist erotica written by women who excel at sensitive descriptions that still seem proper, and which are written in poetic prose.

Louise Lame clasped her handsome lover tightly. Her eyes sought out the effect this conjunction of her tongue on his flesh had on his face. It is a mysterious rite, and perhaps the most beautiful.
                                                           Liberty or Love!
                                                           Robert Desnos

To interpret Liberty or Love! by Robert Desnos an understanding of romantic Paris is helpful with a tour of the Bois de Boulogne, a large park with nature trails that is the scene of Louise Lame's walk, and from the complexity of his writing a number of directions in critical interpretation can be pursued.

For Desnos within an inevitable, destined format, within the discipline of a fixed-form poem, every liberty of the imagination was possible. One form could yield a variety of interpretations - literal, fanciful, aural, visual, legally sanctioned, and clandest- ine. 
                                                  Robert Desnos, Surrealism, 
                                                  and the Marvelous 
                                                  in Everyday Life   
                                                  Katharine Conley

Liberty or Love! by Robert Desnos is a classic novel of Parisian romance written in the genre of the Surrealist novel, with a plot development which is subjective and metaphorical, and which gives the reader the esthetic pleasure of experiencing the marvelous as an appreciation of the poetic spirit of the 1920s.  The characterization of Louise Lame makes her similar to the female leading character in Aurora (1926-27) by Michel Leiris, or to intriguing female poet/artist in the novel Nadja (1928) by André Breton, and represents the limits of erotic interaction that can be experienced in the Paris of the Surrealists.

David Detrich lives in the Upper Peninsula of Michigan where he has just completed The Convergence of Two Narrative Lines Ascending, an ultramodern Surrealist novel written in minimal squares. This year he is working on Dream the Presence of the Circular Breast Starfish Topography, a monumental Surrealist novel written with innovative typographical design. His first novel Big Sur Marvels & Wondrous Delights (2001) is available from Amazon. He is the editor of Innovative Fiction Magazine and Surrealist Star Clustered Illuminations.