MAN RAY
(U.S.A., 1890-1976),
MOHOLY-NAGY
(Hongrie, 1895-1946)
Reflexivity
The 1920’s, just after the First World War, were very intense from a
photographic point of view. They have shown us, with Sander, the combinatory of
roles and crafts parallel to the Bauhaus technical and gestural Combinatory,
and with Stieglitz, Weston, and Strand, the radicalization of “straight
photography”. It is
also the time when American Man Ray, inverting the voyage of Frenchman Marcel
Duchamp to New York, settles in Paris where he elaborates a photography that is
not only conscious or episodically reflexive like those we have just mentioned,
but constantly reflexive. Moholy-Nagy will also develop a Bauhaus reflexive
photography in the same era.
This whim of reflexivity is probably only intelligible if we take into
consideration the formidable shock of classic representation that occurs from
1900 to 1927 in the field of sciences. For three decades, all notions of
causality, substantiality, representativeness, communication through the daily
language, conscience, and sub-conscience – the bases of the Western world
for twenty-five centuries – were either ruined or radically displaced.
Most of the time, this was done in a manner that the public could not
understand, in a way that would have spun many heads. At the end of this
chapter, we shall conduct a short inventory of this moral, logic, and
representational seism for those who are not familiar with it.
1. « Delicious » reflexivity : Man Ray
In the area that interest us, that of the creation of images, Marcel
Duchamp testifies the perturbation in the strongest way. Man Ray’s – who
rubbed shoulders with Duchamp – photographic work is immediately
inscribed in the logico-semiotic diversions cultivated by the master. One
example is well-known: (1) Man Ray photographs dust that has settled for weeks
on Duchamp’s famous Grand Verre; (2) Duchamp baptizes the photograph Elevage de poussière; (3) Man Ray re-baptises it Vue
prise en aéroplane
– a very appropriate title when the photograph is reproduced in its
entirety, not partially, as is too often the case (AP, 241). The ensemble is dated 1920.
In 1924, Man Ray follows the same path, but as a lone rider. He prints
on a woman’s back – the woman poses in a resolutely Ingresque position (*AP,
246) – two affronted “F”,
hence killing several birds with one stone: (1) summarising the human being as he is called and writing “femme” with its initial letter “F”; (2) naming her
twice, even absolutely by writing two “F”,
once from left to right, once from right to left, both facing each other: (3)
figuring her sexual organs by the confrontation of the thus-created lips; (4) making
her bifrontal, by symbolically placing on her back what she would perceptively be from the front; (5) totalizing in a libidinal manner her sex (symbolised) and the beginning of the gluteal crack (archaic direct stimulus); (6) making her appear as a cello, even making a cello out of her – an instrument that is played close to the body, since the “FF”
configure the sound holes of the instrument; (7) titling “Violon
d’Ingres” a violin made with an Ingres figure, which de-metaphorises the expression and pleasantly
situating woman as a pass-time; (8) evoking Ingres’ pictorial subject, resumed by the
odalisque of the “F” thereby traced, etc.
However, Man Ray
and Marcel Duchamp do not limit themselves to leaps and logico-perceptive field
effects. Both are visual artists and cultivate perceptive-motor field effects
in accordance or in tension with the former. Duchamp, who introduced to
Stieglitz’s “291”
such pure visual artists as Picasso and Braque, is not content with taking an
urinal to confer it with the status of art piece, but exercices a 90° rotation
on it, making it a Cyclades goddess and a Bernini fountain. He titles the piece
Fountain (where the emission of rinsing water
wins over the evacuation of urine). His Porte-bouteille looks like a totem. Decidedly, his first drawings expose a
potential stumbling that we will find in ready-made Trébuchet and its variations, which is indeed his artistic subject. In fact,
the leap and the logic curvature on the one hand and the leap and the artistic
curvature on the other comfort each other mutually within the realm of a
general “quantum”
party, where the “particle”
and the “field”
compatibilise. (Quantum theory dates from 1905. In the 1920’s, Dirac’s
quantum Mechanic will pursue the identification of the particle and the field
in physics)
Man Ray’s photographic
subject also combines logico-semiotic field effects like those of the Violon
d’Ingres, with perceptive-motor field effects that stems
from – seeing the same photograph – a crossing of evanescence and weighty
consistency, or still, vanishing sliding and franc cutouts. His first
collection, dated 1922, is intelligently titled The Delicious Fields.
Technical performances then take all their sense at the service of this option.
As soon as he arrives in Paris in 1920, Man Ray rediscovers and appropriates
himself the photogram, which he re-baptizes Rayogram. This direct application in the camera obscura
of the object on the sensitive paper without camera allows triggering the most
puzzling artistic and logico-semiotic “leap-fields”
by displacing the object several times and photographing it successively. One One fine
day of 1929, Lee Miller – his assistant – accidentally
switches the dark room back on, hence conducting a solarisation, an effect that
is well-known to advertising technicians, and that allowed –
correlatively – to decompress the inside of the form and to reinforce its
contours (this is almost the entirety of Man ray’s photographic subject). Other
“delicious”
“field”
triggering tricks joined the latter: the negative impression, the oblique
impressions obtained by the deviations of the enlarger, the impressions in
relief through the application of a slide over the slightly displaced negative.
In any event, the results were “astral”,
a cross between artistic and logic.
We could classify Man Ray’s photographs in two lots. The former would
include those whose movement goes from fluidity and imponderability to the
cutout and the weight, as is the case with The Autumn, in the Four Seasons collection of 1929 (PA**, 83),
where we see (Eluard’s?) penis and the mouth (Kiki de Montparnasse?) softly
rise to the surface, to finally create the bluntest accent at their contact in
the generalized fluidity. The second lot would include photographs whose
movement goes – to the opposite – from the cut-out and the
consistency to the evanescence and imponderability, such as the Portrait of
a tearful Woman
(AP, 245 and front cover), where the volume, which was very full at the
beginning, blurs with tears and a camera shake to end.
In any case, Man Ray works on the artistic agonizing struggle of
representation. To maximize the latter, it was necessary that the most arbitrary
and further away “delights”
should be applied to the closer and most carnal realities, in particular the
orifices of the body, whose libidinal, semiotic and logic importance Freud had
demonstrated since 1900. The Neck, dated 1929 (AP, 243), taken at a low angle
shot, is a penis as explicit as the above-mentioned Autumn.
Reclining Nude
in a satin Sheet, made around 1930 (***AP, 244),
summarizes well this strip tease and reflexivity through its imagery and
through each word of the title. Reclining: here,
many elements are disposed, lying, devitalized like the object in the Rayogram.
Nude: it is always the sexual body that is
intended, for the former above-mentioned reasons.
In : the nude is never quite frank nor visible
nor tangible; it is only a glimpse, here in the ambivalent translucency of the
right nipple, which is diverted and differed touch sensitively, visually,
imaginatively, whilst the bottom of the body disappears under the refusing,
strict horizontal line of the fabric. Satin: is
the material per essence of this photograph, which is skin by its smoothness,
and refusal of the skin by the shining coldness. Sheet: indeed, there are thin sheets everywhere, the sheet of the skin
cladding a nude that is itself a sheet, and sheet of the photo, fluids and
cutout as surface and chartering of the surface. There are never consumed
com-penetrations of the containing and contained, but juxtapositions (let us go
back to the Autumn again). Even the tears are not
true effusions. In 1930’s Glass Tears (AP, 247),
the latter are glass drops placed on the skin of the face and besides the eyes.
That every
representation and capture should encompass a machinery, and should thereby be
indirect, as noted by the era’s physicists (the Relations of incertitude date
from 1927) ; that we should not be capable of simultaneously see and kiss
Albertine’s cheek like Proust notes and attempts to overcome at the same moment
by the overlapping of his syntax; Man Ray gives this to see, literally, through
the decompositions of the photographic process, of which he shows and exploits
the densities and imponderables, the evanescence and the definite. Logic and
erotic have rarely been so “deliciously”
intricate.
2. Systemic reflexivity: Moholy-Nagy
As he is only five years younger and reflexive, Moholy-Nagy must be joined to Man Ray. He defined himself as “Lichtner”, i.e. “Lightner” or “Lighter”.
Just like Man Ray, born Emmanuel Rudnitski, had taken the pseudonym of “Man
Ray”, author of “rayograms”.
From 1923 to 1928,
Moholy-Nagy was a prestigious professor for this Bauhaus we already referred to
in the chapter on Sander, and impassioned with social combinatory. However, he
applies the Bauhausian Combinatory to the photographic process that he
decomposes and recomposes with a vertigo of the digitalizing permutation that
seemingly was Hungarian (nomad?), if we think about what were, thirty years
later, Vasarely’s “unités
plastiques”, Nicolas
Schôffer’s mobile sculptures, and Yona Friedman’s mobile architecture. This
made a good match with the ready-made à la Duchamp. Rather than aiming at creating
something new, which is often an illusory novelty, let us take or re-combine
significantly what was previously done, particularly by the industry. Hence,
Moholy-Nagy tried his hand at photomontages, in the manner of Schwitter’s
collages.
Thus, when he
really started photographing, it is not surprising that this great combinator
should have seen the entire universe as a network, a net, whose essence was
light, which never shows its permutational fecundity so well as when it is
caught in a metallic frame, ropes, bars, shadows of bars that were especially
shot from the top of a ship’s mast, so that the weight of substance can be
dissipated to the profit of a sole reticular structure (PF, 118, 126, 131). We
could only choose an aerial view (****AP, 236) to illustrate this “aerialist”
(PF, 118-135), contemporary of the high angle and low angle shots of filmmaker Eisenstein
and photographer Rodchenko (LP, 94; AP, 228, 229).
If there were still
marked memories of the WORLD 2 – of its forms with integral parts and
backgrounds – with the former photographers, the delicious reflexivity of
Man Ray and the systemic reflexivity of Moholy-Nagy have definitely tipped us
towards the grasp-construction by the functioning elements of WORLD 3.
NOTE ON THE REPRESENTATIONAL AND LOGICAL REVOLUTION OF THE BELLE EPOQUE AND THE ROARING
TWENTIES TO SERVE AS A BACKDROP FOR MAN RAY AND MOHOLY-NAGY IN PARTICULAR.
As soon as
1910-1913, Russell and Whitehead’s Principa Mathematica broadcast an axiomatic vision of mathematic, where the notion of
truth (adaequatio rei et intellectus) gives way to that of consistency of
systems. A little before, Henri Pointcaré had familiarized an audience of
non-specialists with non-Euclidean geometries and with Mach’s pragmatism. In
the latter, the physical theory gives itself as a coherent notional organism,
irreducible to naïve experience. Wittgenstein, whose Tractatus Logico-Philosophicus is dated 1921, will alert the Anglo-Saxon universities on the
circularity of evidences stemming from the structures of everyday and
formalized languages. Gôdel’s works on the limitations of formalisms are issued
from 1930, but testify well of prior effervescences.
In physics, as soon
as 1900, researchers measure that radioactivity shakes some aspects of classic
mechanics. In 1905, the restrained Relativity subsumes Galilee’s group of
transformations specific to Newtonian Mechanic under Lorenz’ group of
transformation, typical of the electromagnetic Theory, and consequently
envisages a universe devoid of privileged references of illusionary
(Bergsonian) psychological simultaneity. Quantum Theory, also dated 1905,
introduces the notion of discontinuous and granular causality, shaking two
centuries of differential equations and the entire western causality (natura
non facit saltus). In 1915, generalized Relativity relates our universe and its
gravitation to a non-Euclidean geometry, that of Riemann. In 1924’s undulatory
Mechanic, the same quantity of energy is manifested as a wave or corpuscle
according to the conditions of observation. And 1927’s Relations of incertitude
state that the determinations of the localization and the speed of a particle
are in inverted exactitude relation.
In 1897, Edouard
Buchner discovers zymase. To explain fermentation, enzymes no longer require
the vital strength of an integral cell demanded by Pasteur, a contemporary of
Nadar. The living itself starts appearing as the result of the functioning
elements of WORLD 3. Emil Fischer’s 1902 Nobel Prize gives the wanted publicity
to the “key-lock” enzymatic functioning.
In human sciences,
Freud’s Traumdeutung’s is again dated 1900 and
aims toward a sort of incredibly changing mental chemistry. From 1912, the
Gestalttheorie no longer describes the animal and human perception as
additionable data, but as perceptive-motor fields with non-continuous
resultants between them: it is through leaps (quantum dare we say) that the
brain switches from one form to another. In 1912, Saussure’s students draft a Cours
de linguistique générale where the language is proposed
as a system of coherent differences, whose relationship to reality is second,
like in Poincaré’s physic theory. Before 1930, Hjelmslev, who worked closely
with the Copenhagen physic institute where the principle of complementarity was
conceived, will rush in the view of a language that is more or less
axiomatizable.
In the arts world,
McCay’s Little Nemo first appears in 1905. This
divine comedy of comics, to which the Slumberland responds – almost more
radically – to Freud’s Traumdeutung, and
whose metamorphosis forecast D’Arcy Thompson’s 1917 On Growth and Form. The different Picassian cubisms bloom at the same time as the two
Theories of relativity. In Music, Schönberg’s atonal period starts in 1908, and
his serial period begins in 1918. The Manifeste du surréalisme is dated 1924, year of the undulatory Mechanic.
None of this was
easy to hear. Even Bergson, whose “concrete
length” at times
compenetrated at consonant with some aspects of the era does not seem to have
understood the Einsteinian demand of a physical (operating) definition and not
only intuitive of simultaneity, since he could not take advantage of the
Quantum Theory. To reach a happy medium, let us add the First World War to
these pacific diversions. The war demonstrated the vanity recorded by Dada, of
obvious ethics that had become as suspect as the obvious representations and
demonstrations.
T.M.D./ADAGP
(collection Lucien Treillard).
Henri Van Lier
A photographic history of photography
in Les Cahiers de la Photographie, 1992
List of abbreviations of common references:
AP: The Art of Photography, Yale University Press.
LP: Szarkowski, Looking at Photographs, Museum of Modem Art.
PF: Kozloff, Photography and Fascination, Addison.
The acronyms (*), (**), (***) refer to
the first, second, and third illustration of the chapters, respectively. Thus,
the reference (*** AP, 417) must be interpreted as: “This refers to the third
illustration of the chapter, and you will find a better reproduction, or a
different one, with the necessary technical specifications, in The Art of
Photography listed under
number 417”.