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Nietzsche
contra Modern
Art
by
Miles Mathis
 by
Edvard Munch
September
13, 2007
I have already
published several papers that discuss Nietzsche, including one
with his name in the title, but I have never yet addressed
Nietzsche’s attitude toward Modern Art directly. You will say
that would be very hard to do, since by the time Nietzsche went
mad in the late 1880’s, art had only reached the level of
modernity of Impressionism, or perhaps the first years of
post-Impressionism. The 1880’s saw very little commentary on
post-Impressionism, perhaps none that put it in a historical
context, so Nietzsche had no opportunity to reply to this, much
less to all that came after. True as far as it goes; and yet
Nietzsche’s opinions on Modernity are not difficult to find and
to extrapolate into our own time. In fact, all one has to do is
study his attacks on Wagner, where one finds pages of quotes that
can be applied to almost all Modern Art, with only a tweek or a
nudge.
Nietzsche’s most well-known translator in our
time, Walter Kaufmann, recommends Nietzsche
contra Wagner as the last and most
concise word on the subject; but I have always preferred the
earlier version in The Case of Wagner,
since there we get more of what one might call digressive
remarks, and these remarks often contain the most color, and the
most pertinence for my argument here. On my very first reading of
this essay, at university, it occurred to me how easy it would be
to change the title to The Case of
Picasso. Long passages of the essay,
entire sections, could stand without an edit, only changing the
names. After my latest reading, I decided to do the work at last,
pulling the most prominent quotes and showing my readers
precisely how timely this essay still is.
Let’s start
in section 8, where Nietzsche says,
Was
Wagner a musician at all? At any rate, there was something else
that he was more: namely, an incomparable histrio
[actor], the greatest mime, the most amazing genius of the
theater ever among Germans…. He belongs elsewhere, not in the
history of music. Wagner and
Beethoven—that is a blasphemy and really wrongs even Wagner. As
a musician, too, he was what he was only in general: he became
a musician, he became
a poet because the tyrant within him, his actor’s genius,
compelled him. One can not begin to understand Wagner until one
understands his dominant instinct.
How
little we need to change to apply that to Picasso. Picasso and
Michelangelo? Blasphemy! Even Picasso admitted it, in print.
Picasso’s genius was the actor’s genius: that
was his dominant instinct. And more recent Modern “artists”,
though hardly geniuses of the stage as Picasso was, still find
their dominant instinct and talent in acting, or less, in posing.
This is the age of the actor, as we all know, of the $30
million leading man or lady. When else in history could Tom
Cruise or Julia Roberts have been a “top artist”? In any
other era, the idea would be an absurdity. But this is the era
into which Picasso was born—lucky for him that he was born into
the earliest part of it—this is the era Picasso helped to
create and perfect. He was nice enough to leaven his lump of
acting with some real works, at least in the beginning: he was
required to, by the standards of the time. But as the 20th
century lengthened, he saw (with gentle prodding from Duchamp,
et. al.) that the works were superfluous. The audience was
focused on the acting—that is what they
needed—and the works could just as well go by the boards. The
audience wanted colorful personalities, talk-show banter, stories
to tell, newspaper copy, love affairs, and so on. Compared to all
this, painted pictures were, well, so boring.
Wagner
understood this in 1860, though perhaps less perfectly. The
audience didn’t want music—that is to say, art—they wanted
a sights-and-sounds extravaganza, hence Bayreuth.
About
“the one thing needful” Wagner would think approximately the
way any other actor today thinks about it: strong scenes, one
stronger than the other, and in between much shrewd
stupidity.
One has to remind oneself
that this is Wagner we are reading about here, an Olympian
compared to all so-called artists now. And yet Nietzsche was
correct about him. And yet how much more correct he is once we
transpose these criticisms to our own contemporary “arts”: to
Hollywood movies, to popular music, to New York installations, to
the entire avant garde agenda, in all its pathetic forms. The
swirling, multiple camera angles and quick cuts standing for
dramatic effect, the echoes and redubs and reverbs and voice
coloraturas standing for musical emotion, the printed weighty
insights and tenuous ties to various holocausts standing as
artistic content.
More than this, Modern Art attempts,
like Wagner, to justify itself by means of a “philosophy”.
That Wagner disguised as a principle
his incapacity for giving organic form, that he establishes a
“dramatic style” where we merely establish his incapacity for
any style whatever, this is in line with a bold habit that
accompanied Wagner throughout his life: he posits a principle
where he lacks a capacity.
One is
reminded of Camus: “when one has no character, one must
have a method.” But again, how much more powerfully this
applies to our contemporaries than to Wagner. Because they cannot
paint, because they cannot create beauty or subtlety or any
organic form, they claim that these things are now outmoded,
“aristocratic”, and that all the easy incapacities are
democratic, and thereby, in principle, superior. This principle
now states, outloud and in quotable type, that it is more useful
to the future of civilization that artists not be able to do
anything well, least of all paint, sculpt, or express clearly.
Any such talent would be discouraging to the masses, and is not
to be thought of. Incapacity is defined as artistic, as a first
and guiding principle of progress.
Art is thereby
replaced by an infantile cue for compassion. Commonly the artist
still points at some external bullseye for our compassion, but
more and more often it is the artist himself of herself who is
the one in need. We do not need to cry for some dispossessed or
wretched third party; we can weep our puddle of tears directly
onto the artist—either for his wretched past, or for her
wretched attempts at art.
Like Modern Art, the music of
Wagner had a literature, about which Nietzsche said this:
Not
every music so far has required a literature: one ought to look
for a sufficient reason here. Is it that Wagner’s music is too
difficult to understand? Or is he afraid of the opposite, that it
might be understood too easily—that one will not
find it difficult enough
to understand?
Concerning art now,
the answer here is clear. The artifact has been boiled down, or
away, to a noxious dreg or vapor, so that it must be rebuilt in
some way in print, by some series of detached words. A mystery
must be manufactured from near-nothing, a difficulty concocted
upon a trace, like re-constructing an entire body from a
DNA-smudge on a slide. But one must be reminded, perhaps, that
before the 20th century, not every art required a literature. In
fact, none did. Art might be defined as precisely that thing that
does not require a
literature, that eludes a literature, that upends any literature.
[Wagner] repeated a single
proposition all his life long: that his music did not mean mere
music. But more. But infinitely more. “Not
mere music”—no musician would say
that.
No indeed. Only a non-artist
would need to fluff up art with non-art. Wagner fluffed and
padded his with Parsifalian redemptions and such, and the
contemporary artist now pads his or hers with politics and
Theory. To get noticed now, you don’t need a painting or a
sculpture, you need the right politics. You need a cause. You
need a relevance. You need a hook for a critic to hang a hat on,
a cause celebre
for the major mags. Even in Southwest realism, it is better to
have a hook than a painting. Anyone can have a painting (it is
thought): better to have a promotable tag, a politics or a theory
or, at least, a narrative that bears repeating in a thousand PR
blurbs and ads.
Let us remember that
Wagner was young at the time Hegel and Schelling seduced men’s
spirits; that he guessed, that he grasped with his very hands the
only thing the Germans take seriously—“the idea,” which is
to say, something that is obscure, uncertain, full of
intimations; that among Germans clarity is an objection, logic a
refutation.
Mein Gott!
Are we Germans still? He has us, pinned and wriggling! Not only
our art, but our science, our “new” religions, from the
obscurity and illogic of quantum mechanics and string theory to
the “great intimation” of the Zen koan. The roots of our
error keep retreating: it is not the 1960’s, not the 1920’s,
not the 1880’s, but now the time of Hegel, 1810ish.
Of
course this mistaking of obscurity for depth is as old as man.
Omne ignotum pro magnifico.
By some trick of the eye or brain, all the unknown seems rich and
appealing. It has been said that the unknown is man’s greatest
fear, but man is actually very generous to the unknown. He gives
it the highest benefit of the doubt: he assumes that what he
doesn’t understand must be more interesting, more worthy of
respect, often more worthy of worship, than what he does
understand. What we know is commonplace—therefore what we do
not know must be extravagant and excessively compelling. And
those who know the least are in the best position for imaginings.
In this predicament, knowledge can only be a letdown, wisdom a
terrible deflation. By this priority, we tend to seek not wisdom:
we seek instead the seductive paradox, the Zen koan, the problem
that will never be solved—and that will never therefore become
a boring commonplace. By the same strange priority we seek Modern
Art: the manufacture of ideals and easy moralities and dutiless
politics from kindergarten clichés and lessons learned from
television. That recipe will never lead to any fruition, and
perhaps we choose it for that very reason. And it appeals to
ancient sloth as well as to ancient perversity: you don’t need
to learn a craft or a skill, you don’t need to have an idea or
emotion that has fully jelled: no, all you need is a foggy idea
clipped from the A-section of the newspaper, and some images
vacuumed from the other sections and pasted together willy-nilly.
If it is all done with enough vulgarity and brutality and
opacity, you may be famous by Friday. In which case you will have
avoided effort, knowledge, and boredom, all at once. What more
could a Modern ask for? Your obscurity gives you the right to
claim Zen-master status, by the standards of the day, but since
your elevation is based on no-knowledge
you are a threat to no-one.
You are simultaneously a guru, a democrat, and a rich person, all
by means of no-creation.
You are Bruce Nauman.
What is
beautiful has a fly in its ointment: we know that. Why, then,
have beauty? Why not rather that which is great, sublime,
gigantic—that which moves masses?—Once
more: it is easier to be gigantic than to be beautiful: we know
that.
Think Clement Greenberg here,
taking Nietzsche seriously, proposing just this. Beauty has been
done away with for precisely this reason. But, first, what is the
fly in the ointment of the beautiful? What does Nietzsche intend
here? The fly is the fact that Keats was wrong: beauty is not
truth nor truth beauty. Beauty is no guarantee of anything, even
pleasure. Beauty may be the most misleading thing. Even
Nietzsche, the anti-Christ, could admit this. But what is the
logical response to this fly in the ointment of beauty?—to seek
that beauty which does not
contain a fly. To be specific, if you have found that not all
beautiful women are in possession of truth, or even pleasure,
that does not mean that no
beautiful women have anything for you. This is simply another
rush to a conclusion, another bad Modern syllogism, another
mistake. A large part of contemporary feminism has slurred all
beautiful women and all beauty by rushing to this conclusion. But
if all beauty does
not deliver as it beckons, by a necessary link, some
beauty delivers exactly what it promises, and it is this beauty
we should seek. This is the beauty that Keats is praising. Beauty
is not truth: beauty may be
truth, in which case the truth is doubly pleasant.
So
Modernity has slurred all beauty to no purpose (other than
co-option), replacing it with an even sandier palace, an even
buggier ointment. Among other things, the Modern program has
praised the gigantic. This is one of the greatest sentences in
this essay, one I have quoted many times. “It is easier to be
gigantic than to be beautiful.” It all turns on the word
“easier”. The new “artists” have claimed that they have
changed directions for all sorts of grand principled reasons, but
the real reason is that they are incapable of beauty. They do
what they can, what is easy, and it is easier by far to fake a
“principled” pose, to repeat current catch phrases, to move
masses by giving them what they want. One thing they want is the
gigantic, which they conflate with the great. Another thing they
want is the “idea”, which they conflate with expression.
It
was not with his music that Wagner conquered them, it was with
the “idea”—it was the enigmatic character of his art, its
playing hide-and-seek behind a hundred symbols, its polyphony of
the ideal that leads and lures these youths to Wagner.
Change
one word, “ideal” to “ideational”, and you can apply that
sentence directly to Deconstruction. Nietzsche might be talking
of Derrida here. Of course it also applies to Cubism and to much
of Picasso’s oeuvre,
but the farther we go into the 20th century, the more applicable
this sentence becomes. It is true of Wagner, truer of Picasso,
and truer still of Derrida. All were histrios, actors, with a
special appeal to hysterical people, but whereas Wagner was both
musician and histrio, and whereas Picasso was a quondam painter
as well as a histrio, Derrida was naught but histrio. Wagner and
Picasso used smoke and mirrors, but Derrida was nothing but smoke
and mirrors. Derrida was the game of hide-and-seek and nothing
else. After Derrida this game spread in a thousand directions,
achieving a truly terrestrial width, but it never thereby
achieved any depth. Every small boat in need of a tow threw a
grapple to Deconstruction, but the entire fleet never gained an
ounce of ballast, since all were still afloat on a false sea,
with nothing onboard but an airy ambition.
Deconstruction
was pre-fabricated to appeal to a Modern audience of precisely
the sort Nietzsche describes: they were looking to be thrown.
“Whoever throws us is strong, whoever elevates us is divine,
whoever leads us to have intimations is profound.” Who is this
Modern audience?—“The culture cretins, the petty snobs, the
eternally feminine, those with a happy digestion”, in short,
almost everyone now. Nothing has been more influential with
Modern Art than Deconstruction, not Duchamp, not Dada, not
Democratic politics, not even the Dollar. Deconstruction has
become the bloated rubric that can contain them all, and still be
empty: a Zen koan that.
Almost no one who claims to take
art seriously stands outside this rubric. The worldwide response
to Nietzsche in the last 120 years has been to prove his point
with ever greater pluralities. What his Germans were in 1880, we
are also, but exponentially moreso. Nietzsche’s “German
youths, horned Siegfrieds, and other Wagnerians” would have
been astonished and offended to find that they were called
“culture cretins” by anyone; but the youth (and not just the
youth) of today would embrace Nietzsche’s slurs with relish. Of
course they want symbols, they would
answer, of course they want enigmatic characters, of course they
want to be “thrown”, of course they want intimations, of
course they want obscurity, of course they want vulgarity and
brutality and opacity. What is my point? What kind of atavism am
I? The problem is mine, for speaking in outmoded terms. For
thinking there is something else than what is now. For wanting
something no longer on the menu.
Besides, the youth now
are quite certain that all these slurs of Nietzsche, and of mine,
are signs of distinction. Vulgarity and brutality, for instance,
are the ultimate symbols of honesty, they would say. People are,
of necessity, vulgar and brutal, and to deny or transcend these
categories in any way is to flee your own humanity. All
distinctions are likewise a mirage and a falsity, so that to
waste time learning facts or skills is simply vanity. There is no
wisdom, only pedantry. No hierarchy but money. No sages but the
sages of no-knowledge. No learning but unlearning.
Of
course, by this logic, there is no waking but unwaking, no eating
but uneating, and no moving but unmoving. These scrupulously
honest youths, to remain consistent, must wake only to puke, and
may not leave their bamboo mats to do so. But of course they have
no interest in consistency either, or they would not have made it
to the pass they are at.
Most amazing is that many of
these youths quote Nietzsche, as if his Dionysian element applies
to their sort of wildness in any way. They assume that because
they have succeeded in startling their parents by getting
tattoos, wearing dreds, or listening to various strange
non-melodies, they have somehow become Bacchantes or Maenads.
They are proud of having outgrown the cult of Jesus, only to jump
immediately into some other cult, be it that of Buddha or Wicca
or Gaia or Bob Marley. Where is the youth without an affiliation?
For these, Nietzsche is just another floating name, another cool
person who did something “radical”, they aren’t sure what,
really. Surely he wouldn’t deny them every sort of freedom,
would he? Surely he wouldn’t expect clarity, or consistency, or
decency? He couldn’t believe in a hierarchy of worth, could he?
He wouldn’t be allowed to be spoken of, if that were the case.
He couldn’t have said anything against democracy, could he?
That is totally like uncool, man.
But let us hear it from
Nietzsche’s own German youths:
Let
us dare, my friends, to be ugly. Wagner has dared it. Let us
dauntlessly roll in the mud of the most contrary harmonics. Let
us not spare our hands. Only thus will we become natural.
In precisely the same way have the
youths of today misunderstood Lucian Freud, for example.
Everything ugly is thought to be natural, and so everything
beautiful false. Even Kate Moss must be monster-fied before she
can become realized. A poor viewing of Van Gogh has led to this
error, so that rather than come away with the truth, which is
that the natural may be ugly, the youths have come away with the
falsehood, that the natural must be
ugly. They hold to this idea at the same time they hold to the
idea that they themselves are a species of Greek Maenad, simply
because they are undisciplined, though the Greeks, whether
Dionysian or Apollinian, could never, of course, accept the
notion of ugliness as a requirement of art or honesty. Daring to
be ugly is not artistic, any more than daring to be undisciplined
is to be a devotee or beloved of Dionysus. Just as the Modern
attitudes toward art are utterly inartistic, the Modern attitudes
to religion, of whatever sort, are profoundly unreligious.
Let
us never admit that music serves recreation; that it exhilarates;
that it gives pleasure. Let us never give
pleasure! We are lost as soon as art is
again thought of hedonistically.
And
again,
Beauty is difficult: beware of
beauty!—And melody! Slander, my friends, let us slander, if we
are at all serious about our ideal, let us slander melody!
Nothing is more dangerous than a beautiful melody. Nothing
corrupts taste more surely. We are lost, my friends, once
beautiful melodies are loved again!
Poor
Greenberg, who took Nietzsche seriously here, who did not
recognize that these were words in the mouths of the enemy,
slandering art itself. For this is precisely what Modern art has
done. This is the lesson you can still get today if you go to be
lectured at MOMA or the Whitney by the curators and directors of
the ugly and the gigantic and the unmelodious. They will tell you
to flee your instincts, to flee beauty and all the ancient
definitions of art. Why?—not because they are realized,
advanced, principled, people of the future. No, because they and
their puppets cannot create it. Real art must be slandered simply
to protect the market. They are lost once things begin to have
real definitions again, art first of all. If quality is
re-introduced, either as beauty or skill or expression or melody
or subtlety or elevation or decency, they are lost. They cannot
supply the goods in that case.
In
declining cultures, wherever the decision comes to rest with the
masses, authenticity becomes superfluous, disadvantageous, a
liability. Only the actor still arouses great
enthusiasm.
That is clear enough from
Hollywood as well as MOMA, since we are back to the actor, the
poser. But it is also true in realism, where the inauthentic art
is more highly valued than the authentic. Kinkaid and Pino are
only the most obvious examples, the inauthentic par
exellence. Almost the entire rest of the
field would be the other examples. Authentic art is looked at
with distrust and unease, by gallery and client alike. Where
would they hang it?
Finally, I will close with a quote
from Goethe that Nietzsche uses in this essay, a quote I have
always loved. What is the danger that threatens all romantics,
Goethe asks himself?
—Suffocating
of the rumination of moral and religious absurdities.
Nietzsche
uses this as a lead-in to one of his many critiques of Wagner’s
opera Parsifal,
the naïve pseudo-Christianity of which he finds intolerable. But
this danger doesn’t only threaten romantics. It has suffocated
the entire 20th century, and continues to hold a pillow over the
head of the 21st, neither of which has been, or is, especially
romantic. These centuries like to pretend they have conquered
both morality and religion, but they have only exchanged some
forms for other forms. A large percentage of those who have
“outgrown” Christianity or Judaism, where desire is a sin,
have graduated to other religions or systems of belief, like
Buddhism or Islam or the Force or Science, where desire is still
negative, sin or not. Not even Jedi knights can trust their
emotions, unless, apparently, they are firing weapons. Whether
you are being lectured to by the curator at the Guggenheim or
Yoda you hear the same sorry advice: fight your impulses, fight
the things that give you pleasure. You might as well be schooled
by Kant or Schopenhauer or Mother Teresa.
The Modern has
a nearly flawless record of keeping the worst of all creeds,
living on an amazing amalgam of falsehoods. As an example, he or
she claims to have been freed from the negative limitations of
the old religions, but still cannot look upon a nude without
shame. The Modern American is “free” enough to sneak around
on the internet, looking at huge piles of porn, but not free
enough to hang a nude in the house. “The kids might see it.”
I’m sorry, what? What did you just say?
Somehow it appears that you have freed yourself and your progeny
for the bad, but not for the good. You are free to go lusting
after other people’s lovers, with your pants around your
ankles, but not free to hang art in your house?
On every
other issue, the irrationality is as rampant. Moderns have
nothing but contempt for Biblical inconsistencies, but find
esoteric meaning in purposefully inconsistent, illogical, or
meaningless koans and paradoxes, either religious or scientific.
Eastern Monks fucking around with the language, like some
perverse computer on StarTrek, is worth days of reading; and
likewise textual revisionists, jerking themselves off for
hundreds of pages, hypertexting and troping and whatnot till
their balls hurt; likewise theoretical physicists thumping the
empty Modern head with every species of high-falutin idiocy they
can cull from the cosmos. Moderns have nothing but contempt for
the Ptolemies of the past, watching their orreries rotate like
dogs watching meat on a string, or the Aristotles of the past,
compiling their Nicomachean absurdities like parrots playing the
pipe-organ; but have an infinite patience and respect for every
article in Scientific American
or Physics Today,
assuming that these charlatans are not as fake as their
forefathers. Based on what? Based on their absolute inability to
deny anything being claimed? By that measure, they would have to
sit in awe at the feet of Renny the Ratboy as he explains the
rings on his pets’ tails as markers of geologic future time, or
sing the praises of Little John Jehoshaphat as he counts the
motes on his eye, tabulating them on his tiny abacus as a
telltale of Parousia. And many of them will do that also, indeed,
since Renny and Little John are the ones who will be picked by
the Turner Prize jury, who will be shortlisted at the Whitney,
who you will meet over expensive though tart champagne at
Gagosian or PaceWildenstein.
Yes, the Moderns have
managed the admittedly astonishing feat of having invented the
reverse sieve. They have sifted through all the eons of human
history, arriving at a completely inverted wisdom, which is to
say no-wisdom.
Which is to say that they have become like the yogi standing on
his head. Yes, the blood may have rushed out of their nether
regions, to some small extent, but it is not doing their brains
any favors.
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